Delta Flight 898 Returns After Cabin Smoke Odor
Delta Flight 898 Returns After Cabin Smoke Odor

Delta Flight 898 Returns After Cabin Smoke Odor

News summary

The U.S. government shutdown left TSA employees working without pay and prompted staffing shortages at major hubs, though union and airport officials debunked viral reports of a planned TSA strike. The shortages produced longer security lines and widespread disruptions; FlightAware recorded thousands of delays and the FAA said more than 5,800 flights were affected at airports including Dallas, Chicago, Atlanta and Newark. Delta Flight 898 from Atlanta to Los Angeles returned to Hartsfield‑Jackson Atlanta International Airport after a smoky odor was detected in the cabin; all 219 passengers and crew landed safely and were deplaned normally. Maintenance crews inspected the aircraft, and the flight later departed after passengers were reaccommodated. Other incidents over the weekend — including a United diversion after suspected space‑debris damage to a windshield and weather‑related cancellations at American — indicate that delays resulted from both shutdown-related staffing shortfalls and unrelated technical or weather issues.

Story Coverage
Bias Distribution
67% Left
Information Sources
d387b58c-602b-49e7-8f0e-990aad2baa47bfb2a97b-336e-48d9-b69a-147df7862dc237a048d0-d1c3-4045-a275-fea6b8818300
Left 67%
Right 33%
Coverage Details
Total News Sources
3
Left
2
Center
0
Right
1
Unrated
0
Last Updated
2 days ago
Bias Distribution
67% Left
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