Delta, citing planes with only one passenger, wants to pare schedule
For most of April, Delta Air Lines has flown just one passenger per day to and from Worcester, Mass., and the company has asked the U.S. Transportation Department to allow it to suspend flights there and to eight other airports.
Separately, JetBlue Airways asked to let it halt flights to 16 airports, including major hubs in Atlanta, Chicago and Dallas, warning that continuing to fly to the locations will “significantly harm” the company’s liquidity.
The requests, filed with the Transportation Department and posted Tuesday, illustrate the dramatic decline in demand as travelers comply with stay-at-home instructions during the coronavirus pandemic. On Monday, 119,854 people went through U.S. airport security screening, which is only 5% of the more than 2.4 million on the equivalent day last year.
The number of passengers has been hovering at about that level for the past two weeks. More than 90 million fewer people have gone through airport screening since March 16 compared to those who flew in the same period a year ago.
The Trump administration’s $50 billion in government loans and payroll grants to top carriers came with a requirement that they continue to provide minimum levels of service to locations they were flying to as of March 1, unless they receive approval from Transportation Secretary Elaine
Chao.
In its filing, JetBlue said it was seeking exemptions to that rule “so that it can continue to proactively respond to the near-zero demand for air travel caused by the coronavirus pandemic and resulting national economic crisis.” Other cities in its request include Denver, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Philadelphia and Houston.
It its request, Delta said its goal was to minimize the number of employees who could be potentially exposed to the virus by suspending service at nine airports within an hour’s drive of another terminal where the carrier was still flying.
Flint, Mich., for example, is a roughly hour-long drive from Detroit Metro Airport, one of the carrier’s largest hubs.