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Crowded planes and airports set summer travel records : NPR

Travelers descend an escalator at Nashville International Airport, which has seen explosive growth over the past decade.

Travelers at Nashville International Airport, which has seen explosive growth over the past decade.

Seth Herald/Getty Images


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Seth Herald/Getty Images

NASHVILLE — Few major airports in the U.S. have grown faster in recent decades than Nashville International Airport, and Shirley Beldsoe thinks it’s changed for the better.

“The airport’s beautiful now. Uptown!,” said Bledsoe of Brentwood, Tennessee, who’s been flying through this airport since the 1970s, when it consisted of a single passenger terminal.

But ask Bledsoe how the in-flight experience has changed, and she says she feels squeezed by the airlines.

“I think the airplane design has made it more crowded. Some of my suitcases don’t even roll through the aisle,” she said. “And then I just think the legroom has gotten tighter. So it’s more the design of the planes that’s been uncomfortable.”

“I think the airplane design has made it more crowded. Some of my suitcases don't even roll through the aisle,” said Shirley Bledsoe on Brentwood, Tenn.

“I think the airplane design has made it more crowded. Some of my suitcases don’t even roll through the aisle,” said Shirley Bledsoe on Brentwood, Tenn.

Cynthia Abrams/WPLN


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Cynthia Abrams/WPLN

If you’re flying across the country this Fourth of July weekend, you’re in good company. The biggest holiday of the summer is expected to set travel records again, with the Transportation Security Administration preparing to screen more than 18 million travelers at U.S. airports over the next week.

U.S. airlines are carrying more passengers than ever, even while operating fewer flights than they did 20 years ago. They’re flying bigger planes while filling more seats on each one, and that’s testing the limits of the aviation system.

The airlines have invested billions to optimize their own operations. Now the industry is pushing the government to do the same thing for the nation’s airspace.

“It’s clear that the biggest threat to [a] healthy and competitive airline industry is our short staffed and woefully antiquated air traffic control system,” Chris Sununu, the head of the industry trade group Airlines For America, said at a hearing on Capitol Hill last week.

Sununu, who formerly served as governor of New Hampshire, urged Congress to find more money to overhaul the air traffic control system — on top of the billions lawmakers appropriated last year to upgrade communications and radar equipment.

“Congress must build upon its $12.5 billion down payment toward air traffic control modernization, with the next round of funding to ensure that technology gaps that have been completely ignored for the last 30 years that they finally get addressed,” Sununu said.

Planes line up on the tarmac at LaGuardia Airport in New York City in November, 2025.

Planes line up on the tarmac at LaGuardia Airport in New York City in November, 2025.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images


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Spencer Platt/Getty Images

There’s broad agreement the nation’s air traffic control system has not kept pace with growing demand. The system is thousands of controllers short of full staffing.


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