Flights into Dallas' two major airports have been halted because of smoke at an air traffic control tower
- Flights into Dallas' two main airport were halted Wednesday after smoke in an air traffic control tower forced an evacuation.
- A ground stop was issued for Dallas Fort Worth International Airport as well as Dallas Love Field, the main hub for Southwest Airlines.
- The FAA said in a statement that the region's TRACON radar tower - not the control tower - which affected all flights entering the airspace.
All flights into Dallas' two major airports, Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport and Dallas Love Field, were halted Wednesday afternoon by the Federal Aviation Administration after smoke in an air traffic control tower triggered an evacuation.
"Air traffic controllers were forced to evacuate from the DFW Terminal Radar Approach Control, which manages airspace across most of North Texas, after a report of smoke in the building, possibly from ongoing construction work.," the agency said in a press release.
The agency continued, explaining that it was the radar operations that were affected, and not the control tower.
In an update at 1:30 pm local time, the FAA said it hoped to have controllers back at their positions in a half hour.
About one hour into the stoppage, delays were beginning to stack up at both airports. According to FlightAware, inbound flights to DAL were being held at their origin until 2pm local time. DFW, the larger of the two airports, was seeing the same inbound hold, as well as departure delays averaging 41 minutes.
Southwest told Business Insider that some flights into DAL had been affected.
Benjamin Zhang assisted with reporting.