The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

More flight cancellati­ons upend air travel yet again

Wintry weather in West, omicron’s spread hobble many airlines.

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Airlines have been preparing for the holiday season for months, reviewing plans and readying reserves of workers. But that was not enough to mitigate the effects of the fast-spreading omicron coronaviru­s and of heavy snow and strong winds in the West.

The impact continued to be felt Thursday, with more than 1,000 cancellati­ons of flights to, from or within the U.S. by midmorning, according to the air travel data site Flightawar­e. By Thursday morning, the site was also showing more than 500 cancellati­ons for today.

Carriers hit hard included Jetblue, with 17% of its total flights canceled. Jetblue said Wednesday that it was reducing its schedule through Jan. 13. In a statement, the airline said it had “seen a surge” in sick calls because of the omicron variant, hampering its ability to staff its flights suitably, even though it started the holidays with more workers than at any point since the pandemic began.

“We expect the number of COVID cases in the Northeast — where most of our crew members are based — to continue to surge for the next week or two,” the company said. “This means there is a high likelihood of additional cancellati­ons until case counts start to come down.”

Alaska Airlines, whose main hub is Seattle-tacoma Internatio­nal Airport, canceled 14% of its flights. Relentless snow and record-low temps in the Pacific Northwest grounded planes last week, and it snowed again Thursday in Seattle.

Looking to relieve its staffing squeeze, the airline industry pushed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to shorten its recommende­d isolation period for Americans infected with COVID-19. The agency had previously recommende­d infected patients isolate for 10 days after a positive test. But Monday, it reduced that period to five days for those without symptoms and those without fevers whose other symptoms were resolving.

Delta Air Lines was one of the first companies to adapt to the updated guidance. Its new policy, dated Tuesday, provides five days of paid leave for vaccinated workers who test positive for the coronaviru­s to isolate, according to an internal communicat­ion to company leaders obtained by The New York Times.

The policy encourages but does not require a COVID-19 test to go back to work — going a step further than the CDC guidance, which does not include a recommenda­tion for additional testing — and Delta is offering two additional days of paid time off for workers who test positive on day five. But the airline’s protocols make no mention of whether returning employees should have improving symptoms, as suggested by the CDC.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? Jessica Andrijausk­as of Buenos Aires, Argentina, rests her head on her luggage Wednesday as she awaits the results of her COVID-19 test at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. Winter weather and crew shortages have forced airlines to spike thousands of U.S. flights.
ALEX BRANDON/AP Jessica Andrijausk­as of Buenos Aires, Argentina, rests her head on her luggage Wednesday as she awaits the results of her COVID-19 test at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. Winter weather and crew shortages have forced airlines to spike thousands of U.S. flights.

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