(Associated Press) Nearly 3,000 aviation safety inspectors are being furloughed by the  Federal Aviation Administration as part of the government shutdown, the  union representing the inspectors said Monday. 
The inspectors check to make sure airlines are maintaining their  planes safely, conduct inspections at airports of planes and pilots, and  visit domestic and foreign repair stations where airlines send planes  for major overhauls, among other safety jobs, said Kori Blalock Keller, a  spokeswoman for the union, Professional Aviation Safety Specialists.
 
Union officials initially thought the FAA had made a mistake when  they received word of the furloughs, Blalock Keller said. But FAA  Administrator Michael Huerta confirmed the inspector furloughs in a  phone call with union officials Monday, she said.
 
Mike Perrone, the union's national president, said he is "outraged  that the FAA would consider aviation safety inspectors as playing  anything but a pivotal role in protecting the safety of the American  public. Furloughing this critical workforce is neither in the best  interest of the economy nor the oversight of this country's aviation  system."
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