KEY POINTS
  • The bill proposes using a special fund to keep the FAA open during future government shutdowns.
  • The proposal comes after absences of unpaid air traffic controllers delayed flights during the last shutdown.
  • Lawmakers face a Feb. 15 deadline to come up with a border security deal to avoid another shutdown.
With the U.S. Capitol dome in the distance, a Delta airplane takes off from Ronald Reagan National Airport in Washington, DC.

Two House lawmakers proposed legislation on Friday that would ensure federal aviation personnel such as air traffic controllers and airline safety inspectors would be paid in a government shutdown, as another funding deadline looms next week.

The proposal came two weeks after a shortage of air traffic controllers, who were working unpaid during the partial government shutdown last month, delayed flights throughout the eastern U.S. Lawmakers and the Trump administration reached a deal to temporarily fund the government shortly after the air travel disruption.