NPR News Now - NPR News: 11-06-2025 3PM EST
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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Janine Hirst. The Trump administration says it will start
cutting thousands of flights a day starting tomorrow as the Federal Aviation Administration deals
with a staffing shortage of air traffic controllers who are unpaid, calling in sick. The FAA
says it will reduce the flights at 40 of the country's top airports in phases, including
airports in Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Washington. And that's threatening air travel
nationwide. Empires Windsor Johnston has more. The Federal Aviation Administration is urging passengers
to plan for longer security and boarding times. Some regional control centers could operate with
reduced staff, meaning fewer flights allow through it once. Airlines are advising customers to check
flight status early and sign up for text alerts. The Transportation Security Administration says
arriving at least two hours before domestic flights and three for international is even more critical
during the shutdown. Travel experts recommend booking early morning departures. The FAA says it's working to
minimize disruptions, but until funding is restored, even clear skies could mean crowded airspace.
Windsor Johnston, NPR News, Washington. Former host speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has represented
San Francisco since 1987, says she won't seek another term. For member station KQED, Scott Schaefer has more.
Pelosi's nearly six-minute announcement video was essentially a love letter to San Francisco
and her constituents. After references to the city's values, resilience, and progress,
she reveals at the end she won't seek re-election. Pelosi was sworn in for the first time as
Speaker in 2007. It's an historic moment for the Congress. It's an historic moment for the
women of America. In her 38 years in Congress, Pelosi wielded power to get federal funding for
aides and public transit and muscled through Democratic priorities like the Affordable Care Act,
now the focus of Democrats' refusal to reopen the government. Pelosi has been a leading foil to
President Donald Trump, overseeing two impeachments and a House investigation into the January
6th attack on the Capitol. For NPR News, I'm Scott Schaefer in San Francisco.
After several hours of deliberation, a jury in Washington, D.C., today acquitted a former Justice
Department employee charged with throwing up.
a sub-sandwich at a federal agent.
It happened in August during President Trump's law enforcement surge in the nation's capital.
Sean Dunn faced a single misdemeanor charge after a federal grand jury rejected more serious charges.
This after the federal agent claimed the sandwich exploded all over his suit and that he could smell mustard and onions.
But a photo showed the sandwich hit his bulletproof vest and stayed wrapped.
His acquittal is the latest legal rebuke of the federal intervention, and the image became a symbol of resistance.
to the Trump administration.
Wall Street is trading lower at this hour.
You're listening to NPR News from Washington.
Several countries in Africa are seeing a surge in cholera cases.
The infection comes from drinking contaminated water.
And peers Gabriela, Emmanuel, has more.
In the past few weeks, Angola has seen an almost 700% increase in cholera cases,
with about 1,000 new cases last week.
Kids represent a third of those cases.
Colora is both preventable and treatable, but it requires good water infrastructure and rapid medical attention.
Yat Boom of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says across the continent,
cholera's return is worrying health experts.
We see the number of total cases that are tripling what we've seen in 2022,
and same thing for the number of death.
He expects things could get worse as many countries head into their.
rainy season. Gabriela Emmanuel NPR News. The federal government shutdown now in its 37th day is putting
millions of Americans at risk of not being able to pay their home heating bills. The shutdown delayed
the federal funding for the low-income home energy assistance program that helps around 6 million
households pay their heating and cooling bills by fuel or fix a broken heater. The Department of Health
and Human Services sends most of the annual funding to states to run the program around
this time of the year. But because of the shutdown, that hasn't happened yet. And even after the
shutdown ends, it will take some time for the money to be distributed. On Wall Street, the Dow is down
271, NASDAQ down 301, S&P 500 down 47. I'm Janine Herbst, NPR News, in Washington.
