All flights into and out of Newark Liberty International Airport ground to a halt Monday morning after air traffic controllers evacuated their tower due to what the Federal Aviation Administration described as "the ingress of smoke from an elevator."
The FAA confirmed the closure but offered no further details on the cause or nature of the fumes. During the pause, FAA staff relocated to a backup tower at the airport before later returning to the primary tower to resume operations, Breitbart reported.
The incident adds to a string of disruptions that have rattled air travelers in the Northeast corridor in recent weeks, raising pointed questions about the state of America's aviation infrastructure.
A Pattern That Should Concern Everyone
Newark's shutdown didn't happen in a vacuum. Earlier this month, four airports serving Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and Richmond, Virginia, halted all flights for over an hour because of a strong chemical smell. Federal Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the source of that odor was traced to a circuit board that overheated and was replaced.
A circuit board. An overheated circuit board shut down four airports serving three major metropolitan areas for over an hour.
Then on Sunday night, a fatal accident at New York's LaGuardia Airport killed two people and seriously injured several others when an Air Canada regional jet struck a fire truck on a runway while landing. That incident is unrelated to Monday's Newark closure, but the cumulative effect on public confidence is undeniable.
Three major aviation disruptions in a single region within weeks. The common thread isn't bad luck. Its aging systems are straining under the weight of modern demand.
Infrastructure isn't a Talking Point When the Tower Fills with smoke
Washington has spent years debating infrastructure in the abstract, treating it as a vehicle for progressive wish lists packed with climate mandates and equity provisions rather than addressing the concrete, unglamorous needs that keep planes in the air and travelers alive. Every dollar diverted to ideological pet projects is a dollar that didn't go toward upgrading the electrical systems in control towers, modernizing radar equipment, or ensuring that backup facilities can handle real emergencies without delay.
The FAA's refusal to speculate on the cause of the smoke at Newark is understandable in the immediate aftermath. But the agency owes the public more than silence once the facts are in hand. Controllers evacuated a tower at one of the busiest airports in the country. Flights stopped. Thousands of passengers sat on tarmacs or stared at departure boards flipping to "DELAYED." That demands a full accounting.
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey confirmed that staff relocated to the backup facility, which is exactly what contingency planning is for. Credit where it's due: the system worked as designed in the moment. But "we have a backup tower" is not the same as "we've ensured the primary tower won't fill with smoke in the first place."
What Comes Next
Secretary Duffy's swift identification of the overheated circuit board in the earlier D.C.-area incident is the kind of transparency travelers need. The same standard should apply here. Identify the source. Fix it. Tell the public what happened and what's being done to prevent a recurrence.
The broader question is whether these incidents will finally force a serious conversation about where federal infrastructure dollars actually go. Not a conversation about transformative social spending dressed up in hard hats and reflective vests, but an honest reckoning with the physical systems Americans depend on every single day.
Smoke filled a control tower at Newark Liberty on a Monday morning. Controllers walked out. Flights stopped. The system held, barely, because someone had the foresight to build a backup. But foresight isn't the same as maintenance, and backups aren't the same as reliability.
Americans deserve both.

