Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

NPR News Now

NPR News: 11-14-2025 4AM EST

14 Nov 2025

Transcription

Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?

2.123 - 19.664 Shea Stephens

Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Shea Stephens. The FAA is not saying when it will lift the temporary flight reductions at dozens of major airports across the U.S. As NPR's Joel Rose reports, many air traffic controllers took on second jobs to tide them over during the government shutdown.

0

20.004 - 36.581 Joel Rose

Over this past weekend, the FAA reported staffing shortages at dozens of facilities at once, leading to some of the worst delays of the entire shutdown. This week, the number of staffing shortages declined sharply to just a handful over the past few days, and that gave regulators some confidence that more controllers are coming to work.

0

37.082 - 41.25 Joel Rose

But they say they will not lift these reductions completely until the safety data improves.

0

Chapter 2: What are the current flight reduction updates from the FAA?

43.453 - 61.904 Shea Stephens

NPR's Joel Rose reporting. Watchdog groups led by former Park Service employees say that the shutdown worsened the funding and environmental crisis at national parks. NPR's Kirk Sigler reports that the Trump administration ordered most national parks to stay open with the skeleton staff.

0

62.204 - 83.52 Kirk Sigler

Thousands of furloughed National Park Service employees are now returning to work after the 43-day shutdown. Many entrance gates at parks remained open but unstaffed. One estimate by watchdog groups predicts the service may have lost upwards of $40 million in entrance fee revenue. This is a big deal because it follows cuts to the agency ordered by President Trump and his Doge team.

0

83.821 - 106.304 Kirk Sigler

Since January, the park service lost a quarter of its entire staff, from scientists to janitors to rangers. Meanwhile, the return of the remaining staff is seen as a relief following reports of vandalism of artifacts at Arches National Park in Utah, base jumpers off El Capitan at Yosemite, and damage to a stone wall at historic Gettysburg. Kirk Sigler, NPR News.

0

106.665 - 118.378 Shea Stephens

In Michigan, three men are charged with trying to aid a terrorist organization. From member station WDET, Quinn Kleinfelter reports that the suspects are accused of plotting an attack over the Halloween weekend.

0

118.51 - 139.734 Quinn Kleinfelter

FBI Director Kash Patel applauded the bureau for stopping the alleged Halloween assault in the Detroit area before it could begin. Now a grand jury is indicting 19-year-old Ayyab Nasser, his 20-year-old brother Muhammad Ali, and 20-year-old Majid Mahmoud, accusing them of stockpiling weapons to use in a crime and conspiring to help the Islamic State terrorist group.

139.754 - 158.455 Quinn Kleinfelter

The government has arrested eight individuals so far in connection with the case, including men from New Jersey and Washington State and several juveniles. Defense attorneys counter those indicted just talked tough on social media but never planned to harm anyone. For NPR News, I'm Quinn Kleinfelter in Detroit.

158.475 - 178.962 Shea Stephens

Residents in the Ukrainian capital were urged to stay indoors early today amid a series of Russian attacks that left at least 11 people injured, at least one critically. Critical infrastructure, multiple apartment buildings, private homes and businesses in Kiev were damaged in the attacks. You're listening to NPR.

181.224 - 206.94 Shea Stephens

The Justice Department is suing California Secretary of State and Governor Gavin Newsom over new voter-approved redistricting plans. DOJ says the plan mandates racially gerrymandered congressional districts. Newsom says the aim is to create more Democratic seats in response to the Texas redistricting that recently added five likely Republican seats in the U.S. House. Boeing machinists in the St.

207.001 - 217.637 Shea Stephens

Louis area have ended their four-month-old strike after approving the company's latest contract offer. From St. Louis Public Radio, Olivia Mizell has the story.

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.