Houston Chronicle

Delta resumes flying after day of chaos

Delta’s breakdown is the second recent outage for a giant U.S. carrier

- By David Koenig

A failure of a piece of electrical equipment at one of its Atlanta facilities initiates a ripple effect that causes hundreds of canceled flights.

DALLAS — Twice in less than a month, a major airline was paralyzed by a computer outage that prevented passengers from checking in and flights from taking off.

Last month, it took Southwest days to recover from a breakdown it blamed on a faulty router.

On Monday, it was Delta’s turn, as a power outage crippled the airline’s informatio­n technology systems and forced it to cancel or delay hundreds of flights. Delta employees had to write out boarding passes by hand, and at one airport they resurrecte­d a dot matrix printer from the graveyard of 1980s technology.

Delta had delays at Bush Interconti­nental and Hobby airports, but the fallout was minimal as the Atlanta-based airline has a small presence in Houston. Delta had seven of the 163 scheduled departures from Hobby and 27 of the 640 scheduled departures from Bush Interconti­nen-

tal on Monday. Delta did not provide the number of Houston flights affected by the power outage.

But why do these kinds of meltdowns keep happening?

The answer is that airlines depend on huge, overlappin­g and complex IT systems to do just about everything, from operating flights to handling ticketing, boarding, websites and mobile phone apps. And after years of rapid consolidat­ion in the airline business, these computer systems may be a hodgepodge of parts of varying ages and from different merger partners.

These systems are also being worked harder, with new fees and options for passengers, and more transactio­ns — Delta’s traffic has nearly doubled in the past decade.

“These old legacy systems are operating much larger airlines that are being accessed in many, many more ways,” said Daniel Baker, CEO of tracking service FlightAwar­e.com. “It has really been taxing.”

The result: IT failures that can inconvenie­nce tens of thousands of passengers and create longlastin­g ill will.

It is unclear exactly what went wrong at Delta. The airline said it suffered a power outage at an Atlanta installati­on after midnight that caused many of its computer systems to fail. But the local electric company, Georgia Power, said that it was not to blame and that the equipment failure was on Delta’s end.

IT experts questioned whether Delta’s network was adequately prepared for the inevitable breakdown.

“One piece of equipment going out shouldn’t cause this,” said Bill Curtis, chief scientist at software-analysis firm Cast. “It’s a bit shocking.”

Curtis said IT systems should be designed so that when a part fails, its functions automatica­lly switch over to a backup, preferably in a different location.

“And if I had a multibilli­on-dollar business running on this, I would certainly want to have some kind of backup power,” he added.

Delta officials declined to say what kind of backup procedures they have.

Most other airlines rely on one of a handful of specialty travel-technology companies to help with IT.

Delta’s system, called Deltamatic, started as a joint venture with Northwest and TWA in the 1990s. It was later spun off into a separate company called Travelport, but Delta bought back its portion two years ago.

“Delta has been so confident that it is as good at this as anybody that it took everything back in-house,” said Seth Kaplan, co-author of a book about Delta’s rise from bankruptcy to prominence in the industry.

Kaplan said all airlines have some old components in their IT systems, including Delta. “But the front end is all very modern, and Delta is rather well-regarded” in the industry.

IT problems are not unique to airlines. There have been high-profile breaches and breakdowns at banks and retailers, among others. Airlines have particular challenges because their systems are constantly undergoing changes and additions, including automation to handle the large volume of transactio­ns with customers.

That degree of automation hindered Delta’s ability to inform passengers, many of whom didn’t know about the outage until they got to the airport.

In the first several hours after the outage, when planes were grounded, Delta’s website and other systems showed flights as being on time.

Computer network outages have affected nearly all the major carriers in recent years. After it combined IT systems with merger partner Continenta­l, United suffered shutdowns on several days, most recently in 2015. American also experience­d breakdowns in 2015, including technology problems that briefly stopped flights at its big hub airports in Dallas, Chicago and Miami.

 ?? Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ?? Passengers wait Monday at the Delta Air Lines check-in counter at Bush Interconti­nental Airport amid Delta’s computer troubles.
Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle Passengers wait Monday at the Delta Air Lines check-in counter at Bush Interconti­nental Airport amid Delta’s computer troubles.
 ?? Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press ?? Jenna Raspanti and other Delta passengers spend anxious moments in line Monday at the Delta counter at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press Jenna Raspanti and other Delta passengers spend anxious moments in line Monday at the Delta counter at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

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