From News Nation:
“Fifth day of travel
disruptions for American Airlines”
American Airlines experienced its
fifth day of travel disruptions Tuesday, canceling 94 flights by 9 a.m., or 3%
of its scheduled flights for the day, according to flight-tracking website
FlightAware. Tuesday’s performance was an improvement from the holiday weekend,
but American still had the highest number of cancellations reported for a
U.S.-based airline for the day. American’s troubles started when high winds
reduced flights at its busiest hub, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.
American was unable to get pilots and flight attendants in position for
upcoming flights, leading to about 2,500 cancellations nationwide from Friday
through Sunday, according to the airline. “We anticipate getting through this
brief irregular ops period quickly with the start of a new month,” American COO
David Seymour said in a letter shared with all team members about the weekend
cancellations.
Thousands of passengers have been
impacted by the cancellations and are now wondering if the disruptions will be
smoothed out before the Thanksgiving travel rush. Staffing shortages have led
to long lines and slower service all around. “The customer service was like 200
people in the line,” said one passenger who was traveling with her infant
trying to get back home to Chicago. “I tried to cut in. I was there waiting for
like another hour and then they told me that I had to do another connection in
Tennessee in order to get to Chicago the next day.” “I had to stay in a hotel
overnight with my baby and I didn’t have anything,” she said about her
experience. “They had all my bags.”
Airlines across the board are
having trouble finding the right staffing solution as air travel bounces back
from the pandemic. “The good news moving forward is that we continue to staff
up across our entire operation and we will see more of our team returning in
the coming months,” Seymour wrote to team members. Flight attendants said many
reached their maximum allowable hours for October during the final days of the
month, leaving many flights without cabin crews. About two-thirds of American’s
cancellations Sunday were due to a lack of flight attendants, with most of the
rest due to pilot shortages, according to internal airline figures. Like other
airlines, American encouraged thousands of workers to quit last year when air
travel collapsed during the pandemic, only to be caught short-staffed this year
when travel recovered faster than expected. “Flight attendant staffing at
American remains strained and reflects what is happening across the industry as
we continue to deal with pandemic-related issues,” said Paul Hartshorn Jr., a
spokesman for the union representing American’s flight attendants.
^ Sadly, 2021 has seen several
airlines (Spirit, Southwest, American, etc.) cancel hundreds (or even thousands)
of flights impacting thousands upon thousands of people. The US Federal Government
needs to step-in and make sure this trend stops. The vast majority of the cancellations
and delays are not weather-related, but due to shortages of employees (on the
ground and in the air) as well as other internal airline issues and problems.
American is now entering it’s 6th day. Hopefully they can get their
act together and not have a 7th. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/morninginamerica/american-airlines-flight-cancelations/
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