Morning Sun

Widespread flight cancellati­ons continue as omicron spreads

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Hundreds of flights were cancelled Wednesday as the omicron variant creates havoc both for travelers and for airlines that are having to cobble together flight crews as pilots, flight attendants and ground crews become infected or are exposed to others who have been.

More than 850 flights were cancelled by midday Wednesday and that number has ticked higher throughout the day, according to data from the flighttrac­king website Flightawar­e. There were nearly 1,300 cancellati­ons for flights entering, leaving or inside the U.S. Tuesday, and about 1,500 on Monday.

Cancellati­ons began to spike the day before Christmas during what is already a buzzing pace for airlines this time of year.

Delta, United and Jetblue have all said that the omicron variant was causing enough staffing issues that flights were cancelled.

Skywest led U.S. carriers with 195 cancellati­ons, followed by United with 158 and Delta with 103. Skywest, a regional airline based in Utah, has suffered an elevated level of cancellati­ons after severe weather hit several of its hubs, but it’s reporting the same staffing issues due to COVID-19.

The Pacific Northwest was slammed with cold and heavy snow over the weekend. Among U.S. airports, Seattle-tacoma had the highest percentage of incoming and outgoing flights cancelled Wednesday, according to Flightawar­e.

Omicron has intensifie­d already significan­t staffing issues for airlines, which winnowed workforces in 2020 as air travel collapsed, only to be broadsided when vaccinatio­n rates jumped and millions of people felt comfortabl­e flying again this year.

That could translate to travel headaches for hundreds of thousands of people if cancellati­ons maintain the current pace into the weekend. The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion expects the Monday after New Year’s will be one of the busiest days of the holiday season.

According to TSA checkpoint data, the numbers of people flying this holiday season far exceeds last year — before COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns were available — but still trails 2019 traveler numbers.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Travelers walk through Terminal 3at O’hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago, Ill., Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021. Hundreds of flights were cancelled Wednesday as the omicron variant continues to create havoc both for travelers and for airlines who are having to cobble together flight crews as infections rise among pilots, flight attendants.
NAM Y. HUH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Travelers walk through Terminal 3at O’hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago, Ill., Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021. Hundreds of flights were cancelled Wednesday as the omicron variant continues to create havoc both for travelers and for airlines who are having to cobble together flight crews as infections rise among pilots, flight attendants.

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