Air Travel Is No Holiday as Covid and Storms
Cancel Flights
Airlines and passengers are ending the year with many
of their plans upended. And New Year’s weekend may be bumpy, too.
By Niraj
Chokshi and Heather Murphy
Dec. 30,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/30/business/flights-cancelled.html
Airlines
may have thought their pandemic troubles were behind them in the fall as a coronavirus
wave subsided and travelers increasingly took to the skies. But a new virus
surge and winter storms have left the carriers and their passengers in a
holiday mess.
Heading
into the New Year’s weekend, when return flights will produce another crest in
air travel, airlines have been canceling more than 1,000 flights a day to, from
or within the United States. Carriers and their employees say the latest
chapter of the pandemic, the Omicron variant, has cut deeply into the ability
to staff flights, even though a vast majority of crew members are vaccinated.
“I’ve never
seen a meltdown like this in my life,” said Angelo Cucuzza, the director of
organizing at the Transport Workers Union, which represents flight attendants
at JetBlue. “They just can’t keep up with the amount of folks that are testing
positive.”
JetBlue has
been one of the airlines hardest hit, canceling 17 percent of its flights on
Thursday, according to the air travel data site FlightAware. The carrier said
Wednesday that it would cut about 1,280 flights through mid-January, citing the
rise in virus cases in the Northeast, where its operations and crews are
concentrated.
And then
there was the weather, always a volatile element in holiday travel but
particularly challenging in recent days — notably in the Pacific Northwest,
where heavy snowfall and record low temperatures grounded planes last weekend.
The next
few days may be just as frustrating. Storms in Southern California and the
Northwest could combine to dump snow on airline hubs in Denver and Chicago,
with severe thunderstorms threatening Dallas Fort Worth International Airport,
too, according to Dan DePodwin, director of forecast operations at AccuWeather.
Alaska
Airlines, whose main hub is Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, went so far
as to suggest that people put off nonessential travel until the new year. The
carrier was hit hard again Thursday, with 14 percent of its flights canceled,
as Seattle got more snow.
As many as
10 million people may fly from Thursday through Monday, according to
Transportation Security Administration estimates. For months, airlines have
been preparing reserves of workers for the holiday crush. But those measures
were inadequate in a fast-changing situation, and many passengers were
frustrated.
“Even
though it’s been two years with Covid, it does not seem like they have this
figured out,” said Sabine Malloy, whose plan to rendezvous with her boyfriend
in Alaska to see the northern lights was upended on Tuesday when both their
flights on Delta Air Lines — hers from Southern California, his from Denver —
were canceled. Delta told them that it could not rebook them for several days,
she said, so they canceled their plans — after her boyfriend had driven seven
hours from South Dakota for his flight.
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Trying to
change plans before departing was also daunting. A traveler trying to rebook a
family trip on American Airlines encountered a recording saying to expect a
four-hour wait for a callback from an agent.
Some say
airlines shoulder some of the blame for the turmoil. The industry received $54
billion in federal aid to keep workers employed throughout the pandemic,
assistance that came with a ban on layoffs. But carriers were able to thin
their ranks by offering buyouts and early-retirement packages to thousands of
workers.
Airlines
started hiring again as the travel rebound took off this year, but most have
yet to fully restore their work forces: The industry employed nearly 413,000
people in October, down almost 9 percent from the same month in 2019, according
to federal data. Airlines have had trouble turning a profit as passenger
volumes remain about 15 percent below prepandemic levels.
The
industry looked to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in recent
days for a partial solution to its staffing problems, lobbying for the 10-day
isolation period recommended for those infected with the coronavirus to be
reduced to five days. Some scientists, unaffiliated with airlines, made a
similar suggestion to bolster strained work forces in other realms, like
hospitals.
On Monday,
the C.D.C. shifted its guidance to five days of isolation for people whose
symptoms have ended or are abating, followed by five days wearing a mask. The
agency said the change was motivated by findings that the coronavirus was
mostly transmitted one to two days before symptoms appear and two to three days
afterward.
On Tuesday,
in a memo seen by The New York Times, JetBlue told employees that it would
expect those “who have no symptoms, or whose symptoms are improving, to come
back to work after five days.” Crew members may remain on leave if they provide
a doctor’s note, but they won’t be paid as if they were working, according to
Mr. Cucuzza of the Transport Workers Union.
Asked for
comment, JetBlue said, “The health and safety of our crew members and customers
remains our top priority as we work through this pandemic.”
Delta is
providing five days’ sick leave for infected workers, with two additional paid
sick days if they choose to be tested on Day 5 and the results are positive.
The shorter
isolation time is fueling a debate in the industry. The Association of Flight
Attendants-CWA, which represents nearly 50,000 flight attendants at 17
airlines, urged maintaining a 10-day isolation period in a letter to airlines
on Tuesday.
“We believe
this is the wrong move for aviation as it accepts that infectious people will
be put back on the job or flying as passengers on our planes,” Sara Nelson, the
union’s president, wrote. Several flight attendants interviewed expressed
concerns that potentially contagious colleagues might return to work without
being tested.
Airlines
always prepare for turmoil, particularly around the holidays, when bad winter
weather in one place can knock an entire system off balance. But the industry
has been hit especially hard this year.
After two
airlines, American and Southwest, canceled thousands of flights in October
because of fierce weather and a brief shortage of air traffic controllers, they
vowed to address the problems, offering bonuses to encourage employees to work
throughout the holiday period, stepping up hiring and pruning flight plans. Both
have avoided widespread cancellations this holiday season.
“We
realized that we have got to make sure that we have staffing in place,” David
Seymour, American’s chief operating officer, said in an interview. The airline
recalled several thousand flight attendants from leave last month and this
month and hired almost 600 more.
When chaos
strikes, airlines engage in a complicated choreography to get out of it.
The main
goal, airlines and aviation experts say, is to minimize the effect on
passengers. But that’s easier said than done.
Alaska
Airlines spent months laying plans for this holiday season, investing in staff
and equipment to deal with the winter weather and lining up backup flight
crews, according to Constance von Muehlen, its chief operating officer.
The airline
managed staff calling in sick at high rates by offering extra pay for others to
fill in, but sustained snowfall and record low temperatures in the Seattle area
forced it to cancel nearly one-third of its flights on Sunday, about one-quarter
on Monday and about one-fifth on Tuesday.
“Once you
get your day off poorly, there’s nothing you can do to catch up,” Ms. von
Muehlen said.
On Tuesday,
the airline issued a stark announcement. Alaska would cut about 20 percent of
flights out of Seattle in the coming days to allow extra time to de-ice planes.
It also “strongly” urged customers to delay nonessential travel until after
this weekend.
“Our values
guided our decision,” she said. “We need to be as realistic as possible in what
we will be able to operate and to let people know, as difficult as it is for us
to do that.”
Getting
flight crews in place can be especially tricky, with workers dispersed
throughout the country and subject to various regulations. Flight attendants
are generally required to have nine hours of rest between shifts, for example.
The Omicron
variant has only confounded that already complicated process.
Capt. James
Belton, a spokesman for the roughly 13,500 United Airlines pilots in the Air
Line Pilots Association, confirmed that the variant is creating challenges.
“Our sick
calls are above normal,” he said. Many pilots have helped fill gaps by picking
up additional shifts, he said, but they are limited to flying 100 hours a month
under federal law.
Operations
on the ground are also being affected. The Federal Aviation Administration
warned on Thursday that rising infections among employees, including air
traffic control staff, might result in delays.
The
Transportation Security Administration said that it was concerned about rising
virus infections, too, but that it had adequate staffing. Average wait times in
airport security lines were about five minutes in recent days, a spokesman
said.
Getting
through security, of course, is no guarantee that the rest of the trip will be
smooth.
Elizabeth
Barnhisel and her husband were heading off on a delayed honeymoon when a
canceled connection forced an unexpected overnight layover on Tuesday at
Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Entering a baggage claim area, they found
what looked like hundreds of bags lined up and crowds of miserable people —
some crying, some napping, because they had been waiting so long for their
bags.
Every few
hours, someone would offer a different reason for the fiasco: frozen carousels,
Omicron, weather. After about 10 hours, Ms. Barnhisel’s bag arrived from across
the airport.
The couple
eventually made it to their destination, Vancouver, but it was not the
honeymoon experience Ms. Barnhisel had counted on. “We’re flabbergasted,” she
said. “We definitely took a risk by taking this trip. But at the end of the
day, we’ve got to get back to normal somehow.”
Lauren
Hirsch contributed reporting.
Niraj
Chokshi covers the business of transportation, with a focus on autonomous
vehicles, airlines and logistics. @nirajc
Heather
Murphy is a reporter on the Travel desk. She welcomes tips, questions and
complaints about traveling during the pandemic. @heathertal
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