Western Daily Press

Thousands stranded overseas in flight chaos

- NEIL LANCEFIELD Press Associatio­n

THOUSANDS of holidaymak­ers are stuck overseas after the cancellati­on of flights to the UK. Passengers booked with easyJet, British Airways, Tui Airways and Wizz Air are among those who have seen their plans to return from halfterm or bank holiday breaks disrupted. The aviation industry is struggling to cope with the rise in demand for travel amid a severe staff shortage.

Matt Wheeler, 37, a train driver from Nottingham, said he and his partner had to make emergency childcare arrangemen­ts after finding out their easyJet flight home from Amsterdam had been cancelled on Monday morning.

“It’s a farce... didn’t know about the cancellati­on until we arrived at the airport at 3.30am, no easyJet staff or any staff that could help us.

“We now have to try and arrange family members to pick our kids up from school/childminde­rs this afternoon and then have them overnight and take them to school tomorrow.

“They’ll have to take time off work (and) we will now miss a day’s work tomorrow as we won’t be home.”

Mr Wheeler said they have been put in a hotel and booked onto a Tuesday morning flight, but added:

“It’s the lack of communicat­ion and no one at the airport to speak to that’s annoying – and the fact this could happen again tomorrow.”

After cancelling dozens of flights over the weekend, easyJet scrapped a further 37 on Monday, with Gatwick worst affected. These included flights from Bilbao, Madrid and Seville in Spain, Milan and Palermo in Italy, Geneva and Zurich in Switzerlan­d, and Malta.

An easyJet spokeswoma­n said: “EasyJet is operating over 1,700 flights today carrying almost 300,000 customers. Unfortunat­ely, due to the ongoing challengin­g operating environmen­t, around 37 flights have been cancelled today ahead of customers arriving at the airport.

“We are very sorry and fully understand the disruption this will have caused for our customers.”

British Airways axed more than 100 short-haul flights at Heathrow on Monday, although the airline stressed that passengers affected were given advance notice. Tui Airways is cancelling six daily flights at Manchester. Some 225 departures from UK airports were cancelled between Monday and Friday last week, according to aviation data firm Cirium. That compares with 24 in the same half-term week last year.

Travel consultanc­y The PC Agency estimated that at least 15,000 passengers were affected by “last-minute changes” to flights on Sunday.

Chief executive Paul Charles said this caused “major knock-on effects” and “it will take three days to clear the backlog”. He said: “We’re now seeing the impact of the weekend’s cancellati­ons with knock-on effects for tens of thousands of travellers.

“So many flights were never reschedule­d after the pandemic, so there often isn’t the frequency of flights to get passengers back quickly if they are affected. We’re going to see a large number of compensati­on claims from those stuck abroad.”

UK airlines have been hit by disruption for several months due to a lack of staff after letting thousands of people go in the pandemic. They are struggling to recruit new staff and have their security checks processed.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has rejected calls to open the door to more “cheap” overseas workers in a bid to relieve the pressure on the aviation sector.

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