Houston Chronicle

Delta pins down glitch cause

- By Ashley Halsey III WASHINGTON POST

Delta Air Lines said Tuesday that an internal problem, not the loss of power from a local utility, was to blame for the disruption that caused hundreds of flight cancellati­ons and delayed tens of thousands of travelers Monday.

Delta initially pointed to a loss of electricit­y from Georgia Power, which serves its Atlanta hub, when its worldwide computer network crashed at 2:30 a.m. Monday. Georgia Power questioned that premise, saying that no other customers in the area of Delta’s headquarte­rs had lost power.

“It has nothing to do with Georgia Power,” Delta spokeswoma­n Sarah Lora said after the airline further investigat­ed the outage, which resulted in the cancellati­on of 300 additional flights Tuesday.

What happened, in fact, was that the Delta computers that control everything from reservatio­ns and boarding passes to crew and gate assignment­s toppled like a row of dominoes when one thing went wrong early Monday.

A power control mod-

ule malfunctio­ned, causing a surge that cut off power to the airline’s main computer network. When that happens, the system is designed to switch in the blink of an eye to backup computer systems. On Monday, however, some of the backups did not kick in.

“When this happened, critical systems and network equipment didn’t switch over to backups,” Delta Chief Operating Officer Gil West said in a statement. “Other systems did. And now we’re seeing instabilit­y in these systems.”

West said getting both the computer systems and planes and air crew back into service was complicati­ng Delta’s operations for a second day Tuesday.

“We’re seeing slowness in a system that airport customer service agents use to process check-ins, conduct boarding and dispatch aircraft,” West said. “Delta agents today are using the original interface we designed for this system while we continue with our resetting efforts.”

Delta spokeswoma­n Susan Hayes elaborated: “We are actually fully operationa­l, it’s just that we’re not able to use that newer interface.”

The meltdown at Delta, which has seven daily de- partures from Houston’s Hobby Airport and 27 from Bush Interconti­nental Airport, was at least the third occasion in little more than a year when computer malfunctio­ns have caused flight cancellati­ons. Southwest Airlines passengers were delayed last month by computer problems, and United Airlines experience­d similar woes last summer.

Aviation analysts on Monday said such problems often are a result of the multiple mergers in the past 15 years, causing airlines to rely on a patchwork of computer networks. Hayes, however, said that Delta’s merger with Northwest Airlines, finalized in 2010, did not result in a hybrid system.

“The passenger service system that we’re currently using is original to Delta,” she said.

Part of the problem that caused Delta cancellati­ons and delays Tuesday was akin to what happens when airports are closed after a massive snow storm or hurricane. Planes that would have reached certain destinatio­ns had things gone according to plan Monday would have been in position to fly from those airports early Tuesday. But many of those planes were out of place for the flights they were intended to make Tuesday morning. Flight crews also were in the wrong places.

“Flight crews — pilots and flight attendants — carry out their responsibi­lities in a rotation, a schedule of flights and hotel reservatio­ns, that is usually three or four days,” West said. “As cancellati­ons occur, rotations become invalid. Multiplied across tens of thousands of pilots and flight attendants and thousands of scheduled flights, rebuilding rotations is a time-consuming process.”

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