Air safety being compromised as shutdown drags on, FAA worker says
As airports across the country deal with flight delays and brace for cancellations, ABC News spoke with an FAA employee who has been working at Dulles International Airport without pay for the last 36 days.
Cleverson Schmidt is an FAA radar technician at Dulles and a union representative. He is a father and a veteran. He says the impact of the shutdown is two-fold: putting a strain on both his family and air safety.

"It's terrifying and stressful," Schmidt said. "I have a family that depends on me. I have a wife that works part time. She has health complications. I have a 15-year-old son who depends on me."
Schmidt said staying vigilant is a key part of the job. As a radar technician, he said they are the "voice, radios and eyes through scopes" for air traffic controllers.
"They're able to determine weather patterns," he said. "Airplanes land safely using our flight slopes." But Schmidt said patience is wearing thin as employees are not being paid.
"We wish to stay vigilant -- we want to, and we have every intent to, but at some point if it's between me and my pride versus my son going without not eating or my wife not being able to take her medication, I will be forced to make that decision, and the investment the FAA and my government made in my training will be gone."
Schmidt said the staffing shortages have a domino effect.
"That culmination, that increase of stress is causing people to get sick more often" or simply to "take time off, maybe because they have to go and do a side gig, just so they can feed their kid."
"That puts additional stress on technicians, other technicians," Schmidt said. "So, you're adding stress on [an] already strained system.
Existing staffing challenges have been made "exponentially" made worse by the shutdown, Schmidt said. "We're exhausted now."
Asked how much that exhaustion is compromising air safety, Schmidt replied, "That compromise goes up every single day."
Addressing lawmakers, Schmidt said, "Infrastructure is not something that should be toyed with."
-ABC News' Rachel Scott and Noah Minnie








