The Reporter (Vacaville)

Air travel soars with new routes but bottleneck­s confront passengers

San Jose, Oakland and San Francisco internatio­nal airports see big increases in passenger travel in recent months

- By George Avalos

Air travel at the Bay Area's three airports has finally begun to soar after taking a nosedive during the pandemic, but plenty of obstacles now confront travelers seeking to get out and about as the hazards from the coronaviru­s begin to recede.

San Jose, Oakland and San Francisco internatio­nal airports have seen big increases in passenger travel in recent months and airlines are launching new long-haul and domestic routes to entice more people to take to the skies.

British Airways just resumed nonstop flights between London Heathrow and Mineta San Jose Internatio­nal. And ZIPAIR, a relatively new low-cost airline, said it will offer flights between Tokyo-Narita airport and San Jose this December.

At San Francisco, Condor is offering new service to Germany's Frankfurt area and Swoop is offering service to Edmonton in Canada. In Oakland, Spirit Airlines is offering new flights to connect the East Bay with San Diego and Newark in the New York City area, while Hawaiian Airlines is offering flights to KailuaKona on the Big Island of Hawaii.

The resumption of nonstop flights between Silicon Valley and London “represents a significan­t milestone in our recovery,” San Jose Internatio­nal's director of aviation John Aitken said in a statement.

A rebound is also underway for airports throughout the United States, according to Brett Snyder, founder and author of the Cranky Flier airline industry site, surging dramatical­ly from last summer.

“Nationwide, things are absolutely booming,” Snyder said. “Demand is enormous for domestic travel and nearby internatio­nal travel — Latin America and Europe especially.”

Internatio­nal travel has been especially slow to rebound. But this month, the U.S. said it would no longer require passengers flying in from a foreign country to show a negative COVID-19 test, easing a previous restrictio­n. Even so, air travelers must navigate a forbidding landscape if they want to fly. Skyrocketi­ng fuel costs, a lack of aircraft, a shortage of skilled pilots and a quest by airlines to ratchet up ticket prices as they scramble to recover from pandemic-linked economic woes are all adding to the list of air travel obstacles.

“Ticket prices are definitely higher now,” said Carmen Silva, a resident of Raleigh, North Carolina, who was visiting San Jose this week to meet her boyfriend. “In March, I paid $380 for a roundtrip between Raleigh and San Jose. This time I paid $1,000.”

And while some travelers are sick of being cooped up and willing to shell out large sums to fly, others are staying away, with some would-be passengers still wary of crowded spaces and no mask requiremen­ts on flights as the virus continues to spread.

Monthly passenger activity at the Bay Area's three aviation hubs still remains far lower than prior to the outbreak of the coronaviru­s in March 2020, when federal, state and local government agencies imposed wide-ranging business shutdowns and limited travel.

Measured by airplane seats departing, a metric compiled by Cirium, which tracks aviation trends, it's clear that all three Bay Area airports are struggling to fully recover from the COVID-linked passenger losses.

In June 2022 compared with June 2019, San Francisco's airport is down 25.1%, San Jose is down 20.2%, and Oakland is down 9.5%.

But there are encouragin­g signs. Passenger levels at all three travel hubs are up from a year ago, according to statistics released by the trio of internatio­nal airports.

San Jose Internatio­nal handled 972,600 passengers during April, which was up 108.9% from the same month in 2021. Oakland Internatio­nal handled 918,500 passengers in April, up 53.8%. In March, San Francisco Internatio­nal handled slightly more than 3.09 million passengers, up 166.9% compared with March 2021.

Oakland is recovering its vanished passengers more quickly than either the San Jose or San Francisco airports. The East Bay's aviation hub relies more heavily on domestic leisure travel, while San Francisco has typically relied on transpacif­ic flights, many of which were halted because of the virus.

“San Jose is more of a business market and not as much of a leisure market, and business travel has recovered very slowly,” Snyder of Cranky Flier said. “San Jose has struggled more than other markets to recover. It's tied to Silicon Valley, which is really a business market.”.

“Things are tougher for San Francisco airport because SFO is a gateway to the Pacific,” Snyder continued. “Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Beijing are still constraine­d. Even South Korea and Japan are only slowly starting to open.”

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