Albuquerque Journal

Southwest cancellati­ons to rise due to Boeing Max

Jet remains grounded worldwide since mid-March after crashes in Indonesia, Ethiopia

- BY DAVID KOENIG

DALLAS — Southwest Airlines is again pushing back the date it expects to be able to fly the grounded Boeing 737 Max jet, meaning more flight cancellati­ons.

Southwest said Thursday that it is taking the plane out of its schedule through Nov. 2, a month longer than previously planned.

Without the plane, Southwest said it will drop about 180 flights a day — about 4.5% of its normal schedule — up from 150 a day.

Southwest is also delaying the addition of new pilots as a result of the Max grounding.

The airline told pilots last week that it was postponing two classes for new-pilot training and two for pilots upgrading to captain. The classes were to begin in September, October and December.

A spokesman for United said Thursday that the airline continues to conduct classes for new pilots. A spokeswoma­n for American Airlines said the Max is not affecting its hiring or training plans. Last month, however, Icelandair said it would lay off 24 pilots and cancel plans to hire 21 more because of the grounding.

The plane has been grounded worldwide since mid-March after crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia killed 346 people.

Boeing originally expected to submit a final recertific­ation plan to U.S. regulators in late March. The plane’s return, however, has been pushed back several times, most recently after FAA pilots found a new flaw while testing Boeing software changes in a flight simulator.

That discovery prompted Boeing to say in late June that it expected to present its proposed fix to the FAA “in the September timeframe.” FAA approval, new training for pilots — the exact nature of which hasn’t been determined — and checking jets that have been parked will take several more weeks. Some analysts believe the plane won’t fly again until 2020.

Boeing is still building Max jets, although at a reduced pace, but it halted deliveries of completed planes in March.

The longer the situation lasts, the more flights per day will be dropped.

 ?? MATT HARTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 Max aircraft lands at the Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorvill­e, Calif., earlier this year.
MATT HARTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 Max aircraft lands at the Southern California Logistics Airport in Victorvill­e, Calif., earlier this year.

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