Hartford Courant

Grounded flights ruin summer travel start

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The unofficial start of summer over the Memorial Day weekend offered a troubling glimpse of what lies ahead for travelers during the peak vacation season.

U.S. airlines canceled more than 2,800 flights from Thursday through Monday, or about 2% of their schedules, according to tracking service Flightawar­e.

Delta Air Lines, usually among the top performers, had the worst record among major carriers with more than 800 canceled flights over the five-day span.

“This was a chance for airlines to show that last summer’s delays would not be repeated this summer, and yet, it was not to be,” said Helane Becker, an analyst for banking firm Cowen, who blamed the disruption­s on bad weather, air traffic control delays, airline crew members calling in sick, and long security lines at some airports.

The good news was that cancellati­ons were down sharply Tuesday. Flightawar­e reported only about 50 on the East Coast.

Various forecasts of high numbers of travelers over the weekend proved to be accurate.

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion reported screening more than 11 million people at airport checkpoint­s from Thursday through Monday.

That was down 9% from the same days in 2019, but an increase of almost 25% over last year. Crowds of just under 2.4 million on both Thursday and Friday nearly matched the pandemic high set on the Sunday after Thanksgivi­ng last year.

Delta did not immediatel­y comment about its weekend troubles.

Last week, the airline said it was being challenged by factors including rising COVID-19 cases among workers, and it trimmed its July and August schedules in an effort to improve reliabilit­y.

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