The Maui News

Travelers endure another day of airport agony. One airline has by far the most cancellati­ons

- By DAVID KOENIG

DALLAS — Air travelers endured another wave of flight disruption­s Thursday despite better weather along much of the East Coast, while United Airlines continued to account for the majority of canceled flights nationwide.

United vowed to get back on track over the July 4 holiday weekend, when the number of air travelers could set a pandemic-era record.

Hundreds of thousands of people have had travel plans thrown in the air after a wave of storms raked the Northeast over the past few days and frustratio­ns are running high.

Airports in Chicago, Denver and Newark, N.J.— all hubs for United — were seeing the most delays on Thursday, according to FlightAwar­e.

By early evening on the East Coast, United had canceled more than 400 flights, the bulk of the 600-plus cancellati­ons toted up by FlightAwar­e. The Chicago carrier was poised to lead all U.S. airlines in cancellati­ons for a sixth straight day.

United CEO Scott Kirby has blamed the airline’s struggles in Newark on a shortage of air traffic controller­s in the New York City area. Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg pushed back against the criticism while conceding that a key Federal Aviation Administra­tion facility in New York is severely understaff­ed.

“United Airlines has some internal issues they need to work through. They have really been struggling this week, even relative to other U.S. airlines,” Buttigieg told CNN. “But where we do agree is that there need to be more resources for air traffic control.”

The FAA plans to hire 3,300 controller­s over two years, but they won’t be ready to help this summer, much less this weekend.

The leader of United’s union pilots — who are locked in difficult contract negotiatio­ns — blamed management for the disruption­s, saying the company failed to upgrade a crew-scheduling system.

“While Scott Kirby attempts to deflect blame on the FAA, weather and everything in between, further flight delays are a direct result of poor planning by United Airlines executives,” Garth Thompson said.

United is offering triple pay to flight attendants who are scheduled off this weekend but agree to pick up extra flights, according to their union. The Associatio­n of Flight Attendants also said crews calling in for assignment­s have been put on hold for three hours or longer.

“The airline actually ‘lost’ crews in the system for days on end because there was such a significan­t breakdown in running the operation,” said Ken Diaz, president of the flight attendants’ group at United. He said the company scheduled summer flights “to the max” even knowing about air traffic control limits in the Northeast.

United said it was getting a handle on its problems.

“We’re seeing continued meaningful improvemen­t today after an overnight effort to further repair schedules and match separated crews with aircraft,” the airline said in a midday statement. “As the recovery progresses, delays and cancellati­ons will continue to decline as we head into what we expect to be a very busy holiday weekend.”

Because planes are packed for the summer, it is hard for airlines to rebook customers when flights are canceled — there aren’t many empty seats.

The FAA said Thursday would be the busiest day of the holiday stretch by number of flights. The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion said it expected to screen the most travelers on Friday — a predicted 2.82 million people.

Scattered showers and thundersto­rms may arrive later Thursday in the Northeast, and storms were also forecast farther south along the East Coast through Saturday. The West is under threat of unstable weather for the next several days.

Along with big crowds and storms, a technology issue could add to travelers’ difficulti­es. Federal officials say some airline planes may be unable to fly in bad weather starting Saturday because of possible interferen­ce from new 5G wireless service.

American, United, Southwest, Alaska and Frontier say all their planes have been retrofitte­d with new radio altimeters — those are devices that measure the plane’s height above the ground — and they do not expect disruption­s due to 5G service.

However, Delta Air Lines has about 190 planes in its fleet of more than 900 that have not been updated because it can’t get enough altimeters from its supplier. Delta says it will schedule those planes to avoid landing in poor visibility while it works to upgrade them through the summer.

The issue affects several types of single-aisle planes that Delta uses on routes within the United States, including all its Airbus A220s and most of its Airbus A319 and A320 jets.

By early evening in the East, about 5,300 flights had been delayed, down from an average of 8,000 a day over the first three days of the week.

 ?? AP photo ?? Travelers wait at the departure area check-in at the United Airlines terminal at Los Angeles Internatio­nal airport, Wednesday in Los Angeles. Travelers waited out widespread delays at U.S. airports on Tuesday, an ominous sign heading into the long July 4 holiday weekend, which is shaping up as the biggest test yet for airlines that are struggling to keep up with surging numbers of passengers.
AP photo Travelers wait at the departure area check-in at the United Airlines terminal at Los Angeles Internatio­nal airport, Wednesday in Los Angeles. Travelers waited out widespread delays at U.S. airports on Tuesday, an ominous sign heading into the long July 4 holiday weekend, which is shaping up as the biggest test yet for airlines that are struggling to keep up with surging numbers of passengers.

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