South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Airlines dialing back summer flights

Travelers seeing fewer options as staff shortages continue

- By David Lyons

Travelers visiting South Florida had every right to be cranky this spring break season as airlines cancelled or delayed hundreds of flights over the weekends, citing staff shortages, bad weather and air traffic control issues.

Now, some air carriers serving the tri-county area are cutting back on flights so their depleted staffs can handle what the industry expects to be a continued surge in consumer demand for air travel. The goal, it seems, is fewer cancellati­ons and better customer relations.

JetBlue Airways, one of the busiest carriers at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport, says it is trimming back flights by 8% to 10% for May and by similar reductions for the remainder of the summer.

“Despite hiring nearly 3,000 new crewmember­s this year, like many businesses, we remain staffing constraine­d,” the company said in an emailed statement Wednesday.

“Tight staffing makes it more difficult for us to recover when air travel is disrupted by bad weather and air traffic control delays. By reducing our flight schedule for the summer and continuing to hire new crewmember­s, we hope to have more breathing room in the system to help ease some of the recent delays and cancellati­ons that we’ve seen in the industry.”

Ultra-discounter Spirit Airlines, which is based in South Florida, said the company is “evaluating” its summer schedules in the face of challenges, but has yet to announce any plans, according to spokesman Erik Hofmeyer.

Smaller carriers such as Alaska Airlines, Allegiant and Sun Country have said they intend to slightly scale back their schedules, accord

ing to industry analysts.

From last fall and into the spring of this year, most of the airlines have struggled to fly their customers to their destinatio­ns on time — and in many instances to get them there at all — as problems ranging from foul weather and air traffic control issues to technical glitches stopped many flight operations cold. The setbacks severely tested shorthande­d staffs that were unable to rebook passengers because of crew shortages and/or unavailabl­e alternate flights.

Bigger airlines such as American and Delta seem to have weathered the cancellati­on storm better because of their sheer size and amount of resources. In fact, one of the reasons that Spirit is cited by observers and executives as a takeover target of Frontier and JetBlue is that the latter two are hungry for planes and experience­d workers.

American, Delta set for summer?

American Airlines, which serves all three South Florida airports with a major U.S. and internatio­nal hub at Miami Internatio­nal Airport, said it altered its summer schedules two months ago, but did not say if flight cutbacks were part of the measures.

“In February, we adjusted our summer schedule to provide customers certainty when planning their summer vacations and we shifted our wide body long-haul internatio­nal flying to destinatio­ns where customers want to go,” said spokeswoma­n Laura Masvidal in a statement.

Delta Air lines, another major carrier serving Fort Lauderdale, Miami and West Palm Beach, says it has refrained from cutting flights.

For 2021, Delta was the top-ranked carrier among major airlines in metrics kept by the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion’s air travel consumer report, which found it had 0.58% of its total domestic flights canceled and 1.29 consumer complaints per 100,000 passengers boarded during the year.

“Succinctly, we have not made any schedule adjustment­s based on staffing as some of our competitor­s reportedly have this week,” said spokespers­on Morgan Durrant in an email.

The airline said Wednesday it is seeing unpreceden­ted demand for summer travel and even expects a second quarter profit after suffering huge quarterly losses during the pandemic.

But the company, which is in contract negotiatio­ns with its 13,500 unionized pilots, is in a public relations battle with the airline’s contingent of the Air Line Pilots Associatio­n over staffing and flight schedules.

Union members are conducting informatio­nal picketing to get their message out to the public at selected airports, saying they are over-taxed by quick turnaround­s between trip assignment­s.

“We’re tired and frustrated because we’ve been working a record amount of overtime just to maintain that schedule,” Delta pilots leader Evan Baach said in a telephone interview. “We have shorter nights in between duty periods, and we’re working on our off days.”

He asserted the airline is trying to staff “too many flights with too few pilots,” an allegation management disputes.

“We continuous­ly evaluate our staffing models and plan ahead so that we can recover quickly when unforeseen circumstan­ces arise, and the resilience of the Delta people is unmatched in that regard,” Durrant said. “Pilot schedules remain in line with all requiremen­ts set by the FAA as well as those outlined in our pilot contract.”

Industry analyst Henry Harteveldt of Atmosphere Research in San Francisco said schedule reductions the airlines are contemplat­ing now are a good thing for fliers who will be in the air later.

“The good news is JetBlue is making a very bold and undoubtedl­y a very expensive move to cut back its flying by a meaningful amount,” Harteveldt said. “They are doing so ahead of the summer and it’s better to do that now.”

Tight labor market

Part of the problem is a reduction in staffing during the pandemic, which forced the industry to cut flying by 85% to 90% industrywi­de when COVID was delivering its severest impact. Despite the rebound in business, the companies have yet to completely restore their labor forces.

He added that some airline employees who did not lose their jobs to furloughs “left anyway because they found other jobs.”

A third element is the sheer competitio­n the airlines are waging against other industries for workers. “Job seekers have their pick of any kind of job at any kind of company,” he said. “Usually, there are more people chasing jobs at airlines than there are jobs available.”

He said carriers are acting in the face of “an enormous amount of demand out there for travel” as well as a desire by the companies to recoup the money they lost during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, which all but grounded the nation’s airlines.

“I don’t know that we’re done seeing potential changes to airline schedules,” he said. “The airlines are looking at all of their key employee groups including pilots, flight attendants, airport workers and reservatio­ns and customer service employees,” he said.

The objective: Make sure they have enough people on duty to cover various disruption­s “before they get into the thick of summer.”

 ?? CARLINE JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? The JetBlue Airways ticket counter at Fort Lauderdale Airport on Friday. Multiple airlines, including JetBlue Airways and Spirit Airlines, are cutting back their summer schedules.
CARLINE JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL The JetBlue Airways ticket counter at Fort Lauderdale Airport on Friday. Multiple airlines, including JetBlue Airways and Spirit Airlines, are cutting back their summer schedules.

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