US shutdown aviation chaos raises fears of spike in workers’ compensation claims

Robert Williams  ; 2025-11-27 20:09:51

Aviation workers confront heightened risks of physical injury and stress amid a high-pressure period

Workers Comp

By Gia Snape

Nov 21, 2025Share

Chaos in airline operations triggered by the prolonged US government shutdown has heightened concerns that workers’ compensation claims among aviation-industry employees could rise sharply in the coming months.

Earlier this month, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) warned of up to a 10 % cut in air-traffic capacity across 40 major US airports to ease pressure on controller staffing amid the shutdown that began on Oct. 1. An industry trade group told Reuters that over 3.2 million travellers were affected by air traffic controller shortages by early November.

The shutdown ended on Nov. 13, after President Donald Trump signed a bill reopening the government.

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Sarah Thomas (pictured), managing partner at Jones and Jones, said the aviation workforce has been under “higher-pressure” conditions. With mass flight delays, cancellations, and added staffing issues, insurers and aviation firms alike are bracing for a wave of workplace injury, stress and assault-related claims.

“We might see a pop-up of claims just based on this highly pressurized moment,” Thomas said.

The anatomy of aviation-workplace claims

Workers’ compensation exposures in aviation differ significantly from those in typical customer-facing industries, largely because the workplace itself is dynamic, mobile, and high-risk. The most common injuries resulting in claims, according to Thomas, include:

  • Turbulence injuries: Sudden jolts can injure flight attendants or crew members who are not secured.
  • Drink-cart injuries: “The drink cart is one of the heaviest items on the plane,” Thomas noted, and improper handling, especially in tight aisles, can strain backs or shoulders.
  • Public-interaction incidents: Verbal or physical altercations can lead to mental stress claims or bodily injuries.
  • Sinus, ear, and pressure-related injuries: Seasonal illness and cabin-pressure fluctuations can cause ear, sinus, and headache issues.

Thomas also highlighted that long hours and unresolved operational disruption increase the likelihood of back-injuries, musculoskeletal strains, and stress-related claims.

“With these delays and cancellations… people are working really long hours,” she told Insurance Business. “It could definitely cause an increase in stress claims.”

Ground crew are not immune. Thomas noted that “sprains and strains” are prevalent among personnel loading baggage and equipment, especially during peak travel periods (e.g. year-end holidays). Meanwhile, flight crew may face stress claims stemming from turbulence, interactions with passengers and prolonged duty periods.

Beyond physical hazards, there is concern that worker exposure to frustrated or aggressive passengers may increase as the shutdown-related travel problems continue.

“We have seen [violence] in general,” Thomas said. “It can run the gamut from being on the receiving end of a verbal barrage that causes stress, but we’ve also seen physical altercations.”

Implications for insurers and employers

For insurers underwriting aviation workers’ compensation, this disruption raises questions around exposure to both physical injuries and psychosocial claims. Since the pandemic, carrier exposure to latent trauma, workplace aggression and fatigue-driven injury has increased in many public-facing sectors.

Employers in the aviation sector should prioritize:

  • Enhanced safety training: Thomas emphasized that prevention “grounded in safety” remains the best mitigant: teaching safe lifting techniques, how to manoeuvre drink carts, correct posture after long hours, etc.
  • Monitoring claims trends: Employers should track new injury types or increases in particular roles or routes, so they can tailor training, rest-break scheduling and job-rotation strategies accordingly.
  • Support for mental-health/stress claims: Given the rise in public aggression, long shifts and operational uncertainty, acknowledging mental-health risks in the workplace is critical.
  • Scheduling and fatigue-management: If delays lengthen duty times or force unplanned reassignments, exposure to injury and stress claims grows.

The US government shutdown’s ripple effects have thrust the aviation ecosystem into turbulent territory. Historically, aviation injury claims surge in high-volume travel periods, and this period’s operational disruption may overlay additional risk.

“It’s too soon to tell,” Thomas cautioned, “but I do think there’s going to be possibly a spike (in claims) depending on if people were working more hours than they were used to.”

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