The Columbus Dispatch

Summer travel expected to surge

Big crowds, high prices likely as season kicks off

- David Koenig

The unofficial start of the summer travel season is here, with airlines hoping to avoid the chaos of last year and travelers scrounging for ways to save a few bucks on pricey airfares and hotel rooms.

Some travelers say they will settle for fewer trips than they hoped to take, or they will drive instead of fly. Others are finding different money-saving sacrifices.

Stephanie Hanrahan thought she’d save money by planning ahead for her daughter’s birthday trip to Disney World in Florida. Instead, it ended up costing the same as the Dallas-area family’s trip for four to California last summer, so now her husband and son are staying home.

“We just had to grit our teeth,” said Hanrahan, a writer and speaker who also runs a nonprofit, as she and daughter Campbell waited for their flight last week at Dallas Love Field.

The number of people going through U.S. airports hit pandemic-era highs last weekend, and those records are almost certain to be broken over the Memorial Day holiday.

AAA predicts that 37 million Americans will drive at least 50 miles from home this weekend, an increase of more than 2 million from Memorial Day last year but still below pre-pandemic numbers in 2019. The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion expects to screen 10 million travelers between Friday and Monday, a 14% increase over the holiday in 2022 and slightly more than in 2019.

With more travel comes more expense. The average rate for a U.S. hotel room last week was $157 a night, up from $150 in the same week last year, according to hotel data provider STR.

And the average daily rate for other short-term rentals such as Airbnb and Vrbo rose to $316 last month, up 1.4% from a year ago, according to AIRDNA, which tracks the industry.

There is a bit of good news for drivers, however: The national average for a gallon of regular was $3.56 at midweek, down from $4.60 at this time last year, according to AAA. Renting a car is also cheaper than a year ago, when some popular destinatio­ns ran out of vehicles. Travel company Expedia said larger inventorie­s let the companies rent more cars at lower prices.

For air travelers, airline industry officials say carriers have fixed problems that contribute­d to a surge in flight cancellati­ons and delays last summer, when 52,000 flights were nixed from June through August. Airlines have hired about 30,000 workers since then, including thousands of pilots, and they are using bigger planes to reduce flights but not the number of seats.

“I don’t have the hubris to tell you exactly how the summer is going to go, but we have prepared and we have a robust plan for it,” said Andrew Watterson, chief operating officer at Southwest Airlines, which struggled at times over the summer of 2022 and suffered an epic meltdown around Christmas, canceling nearly 17,000 flights.

David Seymour, the chief operating officer of American Airlines, said his staff has fine-tuned a system it uses to predict the impact of storms on major airports and devise a plan for recovering from disruption­s. He said it is reducing cancellati­ons.

“It’s going to be a solid summer for us,” Seymour said.

Last month, the Government Accountabi­lity Office blamed airlines for an increase in flight cancellati­ons as travel recovered from the pandemic. It also said airlines are taking longer to recover from disruption­s such as storms.

Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg

says the government will hold airlines responsibl­e to treat passengers fairly when the carriers cause cancellati­ons or long delays. But just like the airlines, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion – the agency that manages the nation’s air traffic – has had its own staffing shortages and occasional breakdowns of aging technology.

The FAA is training about 3,000 more controller­s, but they won’t be ready this summer. The agency resorted to nudging airlines to reduce flights in the New York City area this summer, and it opened 169 new flight paths over the East Coast to reduce bottleneck­s.

“It’s going to be an ordeal,” said travel analyst Henry Harteveldt, “but the airlines have done a lot to improve their ability to operate well this summer.”

Airlines hope that limiting the number of flights will improve reliabilit­y and reduce delays. It seems to be working. About one in every 70 U.S. flights have been canceled this year – half the rate of a year ago and lower than in 2019.

Limiting the number of flights also keeps prices above pre-pandemic levels. A provider of travel data, Hopper, predicts that average domestic airfares will peak next month at $328 for a round-trip ticket, which is down from last summer’s record of $400 but 4% higher than in 2019.

There are some last-minute deals on domestic flights, Hopper found, but internatio­nal fares are their highest in more than five years, with prices to Europe up 50% from a year ago.

The big question is how long consumers can keep paying for airline tickets and accommodat­ions amid high inflation and news about layoffs and bank failures.

Bank of America analysts say data from their credit and debit card customers showed a slowdown in spending in April, as card use fell below year-before levels for the first time since February 2021. They say spending on hotels has dipped this spring.

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ/AP ?? The number of people going through U.S. airports hit pandemic-era highs last weekend, and those records are almost certain to be broken over the Memorial Day holiday.
TONY GUTIERREZ/AP The number of people going through U.S. airports hit pandemic-era highs last weekend, and those records are almost certain to be broken over the Memorial Day holiday.

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