Times Colonist

Airlines inch back to normal after Atlanta airport blackout

- DON SCHANCHE JR. and TOM KRISHER

ATLANTA — The American air-travel system struggled to get back on schedule and re-book stranded passengers Monday after a fire and blackout at the world’s busiest airport forced the cancellati­on of more than 1,500 flights days before the start of the Christmas rush.

Travellers sat on the floor, slumped in chairs or stood in long lines at ticket counters a day after the undergroun­d blaze knocked out electricit­y and crippled Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport for about 11 hours.

A spokesman for Delta, by far the biggest airline at the airport, said most of its delayed passengers were booked on other flights scheduled to leave Monday.

Spokesman Michael Thomas said the airline should be “largely if not completely” back to normal by today, well before the huge travel weekend ahead of Christmas Day.

But no matter how fast Delta and other airlines move, it will take a few days to get the hundreds of thousands of grounded passengers to their final destinatio­ns, said Robert Mann, president of an airline-consulting firm in Port Washington, New York.

In rare cases, some passengers won’t arrive until Thursday, he said.

“There are just so few seats available during a peak holiday week, that’s just going to take a lot of flights with four or five seats apiece,” Mann said.

Southwest, the airport’s secondlarg­est airline, said it was back on a normal schedule, but a spokesman could not say how long it would take to clear the backlog.

American Airlines, which is much smaller, said that it, too, booked many of its passengers on new flights but that some will have to wait until later in the week to fly.

The fire broke out Sunday afternoon next to equipment for a backup system, causing that to fail, too. Power wasn’t fully restored until about midnight.

The control tower did not lose power because it has a separate electrical feed, and planes that were in the air and close to Atlanta when the blackout hit were allowed to land. Other incoming flights were diverted, and outgoing flights were halted.

Anthony Foxx, transporta­tion secretary under former U.S. president Barack Obama, was among many travellers stuck for hours in a plane on the tarmac. He blasted airport officials, saying the problem was “compounded by confusion and poor communicat­ion.”

“Total and abject failure here at ATL Airport today,” he tweeted, adding that there was “no excuse for lack of workable redundant power source. NONE!”

Georgia Power CEO Paul Bowers issued an apology and blamed the fire on a failure in a switch gear. He said the utility is considerin­g a change in the setup of the main and backup systems to prevent a similar blackout.

About noon Monday, stranded travellers sat on the floor, charging cellphones at the electrical outlets. An Atlanta city employee in a Santa hat gave out candy.

David and Lynn Carden, sitting in soft chairs in the airport’s atrium, left London early Sunday for Key West, Florida, but were diverted to Cincinnati because of the blackout. Delta got them a hotel room and put them on a Monday flight to Atlanta. From there, they awaited an afternoon flight to Florida.

“Delta has been pretty good,” David Carden said, counting themselves luckier than passengers who spent the night in an airport. “We don’t always get this kind of customer service in the U.K.”

Delta cancelled about 1,000 flights Sunday and 400 more on Monday, in many cases because the pilots and airplanes were in the wrong places. To help clear the backlog, it added flights and found seats for some of its customers on other airlines.

Hartsfield-Jackson serves an average of 275,000 passengers a day. Nearly 2,500 planes arrive and depart each day.

Mann said the rebooking of passengers was probably complicate­d by the large number of inexperien­ced travellers this time of year.

“They’re more elderly, they’re more young people, they’re more infrequent travellers,” he said. “All these folks are going to require a lot of face time, a lot of hand-holding.”

 ??  ?? Exhausted travellers sleep in the atrium at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport on Monday.
Exhausted travellers sleep in the atrium at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport on Monday.

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