Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Widespread flight cancellati­ons continue as omicron spreads

Airlines scramble to find enough staff to fly

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NEW YORK – Hundreds of flights were canceled Wednesday as the omicron variant creates havoc for travelers and for airlines that are having to cobble together flight crews as pilots, flight attendants and ground crews become infected or are exposed to others who have been.

More than 850 flights were canceled by midday Wednesday, and that number ticked higher throughout the day, according to data from the flight-tracking website FlightAwar­e. There were nearly 1,300 cancellati­ons for flights entering, leaving or inside the U.S. on Tuesday, and about 1,500 on Monday.

Cancellati­ons began to spike the day before Christmas during what is already a buzzing pace for airlines this time of year.

Delta, United and JetBlue said the omicron variant was causing enough staffing issues that flights were canceled.

SkyWest led U.S. carriers with 195 cancellati­ons, followed by United with 158 and Delta with 103. SkyWest, a regional airline based in Utah, has suffered an elevated level of cancellati­ons after severe weather hit several of its hubs, but it’s reporting the same staffing issues due to COVID-19.

The Pacific Northwest was slammed with cold and heavy snow over the weekend. Among U.S. airports, SeattleTac­oma had the highest percentage of incoming and outgoing flights canceled Wednesday, according to FlightAwar­e.

Omicron has intensified already significant staffing issues for airlines, which winnowed workforces in 2020 as air travel collapsed, only to be broadsided when vaccinatio­n rates jumped and millions of people felt comfortabl­e flying again this year.

That could translate to travel headaches for hundreds of thousands of people if cancellati­ons maintain the current pace into the weekend. The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion expects the Monday after New Year’s will be one of the busiest days of the holiday season.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP FILE ?? Delta, United and JetBlue have said the omicron variant was causing enough staffing issues that flights were canceled.
NAM Y. HUH/AP FILE Delta, United and JetBlue have said the omicron variant was causing enough staffing issues that flights were canceled.

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