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FAA says traffic resumes at Washington area airports

By Thomson Reuters Mar 27, 2026 | 7:03 PM

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, March 27 (Reuters) – The Federal Aviation Administration said traffic was resuming at the three primary ​Washington, DC-area airports late on Friday ‌after a strong chemical smell forced the evacuation of an Virginia air traffic control facility.

The FAA said controllers had returned to the Potomac ‌Consolidated ​Terminal RADAR Approach Control ⁠or TRACON, which ⁠controls airspace over numerous airports in the Washington region.

The FAA issued ground stops at Reagan Washington National Airport, Washington Dulles, ​Baltimore and smaller airports in Charlottesville and Richmond around 6:40 p.m. EDT ⁠before lifting them about ⁠90 minutes later.

The FAA said ​there would be continuing delays as air traffic ​returns to normal. FlightAware said 30% ‌of arriving flights at Baltimore and National were delayed and 13% at Dulles.

The incident was the second time in two ⁠weeks an odor at the air traffic facility in Warrenton, Virginia has snarled air traffic.

Another strong ⁠smell ‌prompted the FAA on March ⁠13 to halt air traffic. ​The ‌FAA said then it had halted ​traffic ⁠because of a strong chemical smell tied to a circuit board that overheated, which had prompted fire departments to respond.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chris Reese and ​Lincoln Feast.)