Las Vegas Review-Journal

Southwest adjusts flights

Grounding of Max jets means Mccarran moves

- By Mick Akers Las Vegas Review-journal

Southwest Airlines’ announceme­nt that it will keep Boeing 737 Max planes on the ground through most of the summer will affect hundreds of flights per day nationally.

Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport’s busiest carrier extended the removal of the Max planes through at least Aug. 10, citing impending software enhancemen­ts and training requiremen­ts with the troubled aircraft, Southwest announced Thursday.

The revision will remove roughly 371 weekday flights from Southwest’s schedule out of its total peakday schedule of more than 4,000 daily flights.

The effect on Mccarran is 20 daily flights out of Southwest’s more than 228 daily flights at the airport, according to Southwest spokesman Chris Mainz.

“The impact is spread across

several markets, so Las Vegas did not lose any nonstop service,” Mainz said.

Southwest has been pushing back the return of the Max plane since last year, as Boeing addresses issues with the aircraft. Max jets have been grounded since March after two fatal crashes that killed 346 people

on Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines flights over a five-month span between October 2018 and March of last year.

“We remain confident that, once certified by the FAA, the enhancemen­ts will support the safe operation of the Max,” Southwest said in a news release.

Removing the Max plane from scheduled service ahead of time reduces last-minute flight cancellati­ons and unexpected disruption­s to customers’

travel plans, the airline said.

Customers who already booked trips on affected flights will be notified of their re-accommodat­ed travel according to Southwest’s procedures.

“We offer our apologies to our customers impacted by this change, and we thank them for their continued patience,” the release said.

Contact Mick Akers at makers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2920. Follow @mickakers on Twitter.

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