Los Angeles Times

New Year’s Eve travel disrupted by a wave of flight cancellati­ons

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More canceled flights frustrated air travelers on the final day of 2021 and appeared all but certain to inconvenie­nce hundreds of thousands more over the New Year’s holiday weekend.

Airlines blamed many of the cancellati­ons on crew shortages related to the surge in COVID infections, with wintry weather in parts of the United States compoundin­g the problem.

By late Friday afternoon, airlines had scrubbed about 1,600 U.S. flights and about 3,200 worldwide, according to tracking service FlightAwar­e. That compared with about 1,400 U.S. cancellati­ons for all of Thursday.

That pushed the total U.S. cancellati­ons since Christmas Eve above 9,000.

The disruption­s come just as travel numbers climb higher going into the New Year’s holiday weekend. Since Dec. 16, more than 2 million travelers a day on average have passed through U.S. airport security checkpoint­s, an increase of nearly 100,000 a day since November.

Flight cancellati­ons began rising shortly before Christmas, most notably for United, Delta and JetBlue.

On Friday, United canceled more than 200 flights, or 11% of its schedule — and that doesn’t include cancellati­ons on the United Express regional affiliate. CommutAir, which operates many United Express flights, scrubbed one-third of its schedule by late afternoon, according to FlightAwar­e figures.

JetBlue canceled more than 140 flights, or 14% of its schedule, and Delta grounded more than 100, or 5% of its flights, by Friday late afternoon.

Other forms of transporta­tion are also being hammered by the surge in virus cases. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday that it is monitoring more than 90 cruise ships because of COVID-19 outbreaks. The health agency warned people not to go on cruises, even if they are fully vaccinated against the virus.

The remnants of the Delta variant and the rise of the Omicron variant pushed the seven-day rolling average of new daily COVID-19 cases in the U.S. above 350,000, nearly triple the rate of just two weeks ago, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.

 ?? LM Otero Associated Press ?? TRAVELERS ARE separated by barriers at Dallas Love Field. Airlines blamed many cancellati­ons on crew shortages. Wintry weather compounded the problem.
LM Otero Associated Press TRAVELERS ARE separated by barriers at Dallas Love Field. Airlines blamed many cancellati­ons on crew shortages. Wintry weather compounded the problem.

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