Chicago Sun-Times

EASTER CELEBRATED WITH PANDEMIC SPACING; DELTA AIR LINES OFFERS SOME SEATS IN MIDDLE ROW EARLIER THAN EXPECTED

- BY TOM KRISHER

DETROIT — Delta Air Lines canceled about 100 flights Sunday due to staff shortages, and it opened up middle seats a month earlier than expected in order to carry more passengers.

The airline says it had over 1 million passengers during the past few days, the highest number since before the coronaviru­s pandemic began last year.

“We apologize to our customers for the inconvenie­nce, and the majority have been rebooked for the same travel day,” the airline said Sunday in a statement.

Delta took steps to increase passenger capacity, including opening middle seats on Sunday and Monday, in an effort to accommodat­e passengers.

On Wednesday, the airline announced that it would stop blocking off middle seats starting in May. The move was made last April to keep passengers farther apart, a policy that Delta’s CEO had repeatedly cited as raising trust in the airline. The seats would be reopened as air travel recovers and more people become vaccinated against COVID-19, the airline said.

Delta said the middle seats were opened just for Sunday and Monday, and its seat-blocking policy has not changed. Where needed, seats could be unblocked in order to get customers to their destinatio­ns on the same day.

“Delta teams have been working through various factors, including staffing, large numbers of employee vaccinatio­ns and pilots returning to active status,” the airline said in the statement. Some employees were having adverse side effects from being vaccinated.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP FILE ?? Delta Air Lines had to cancel about 100 flights on Sunday because of staff shortages, but it opened middle seats on some flights to accommodat­e passengers.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP FILE Delta Air Lines had to cancel about 100 flights on Sunday because of staff shortages, but it opened middle seats on some flights to accommodat­e passengers.

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