USA TODAY International Edition

JetBlue pledges to have better summer after April meltdown

- Dawn Gilbertson

JetBlue Airways has been giving passengers and employees fits this month, with more than 2,000 flight cancellati­ons and 10,000 delays.

The New York- based airline’s fix for the problem, which it blamed on weather and staffing shortages inside and outside the airline: cutting flights ahead of the busy summer travel season so it has more slack in the system when things go awry.

“We are taking swift and significant actions to get the operation back on track in the near term and deliver the JetBlue experience that our customers love and expect,” JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes told investors and reporters on the airline’s earnings call Tuesday.

JetBlue, hoping to capitalize on surging travel demand, just a few months ago had big plans for the summer and remainder of 2022, with plans to offer 15% more seats than in 2019. Now, the airline says capacity at the most will be up by just 5% over 2019, and could be flat. Summer flight cuts are the steepest so far.

In early March, JetBlue had 33,000 flights scheduled for June. By late April, the total was down to 27,000, an 18% decline, according to data from airline analytics company Cirium.

The upshot for travelers who booked trips already: those dreaded emails about flight changes. Not to mention long waits to reach someone at JetBlue for those unhappy with their new flights. For those who haven’t booked, fewer flights usually means higher ticket prices, especially when travel demand is sky high.

On social media, JetBlue has been telling disgruntle­d travelers whose flights have been “disrupted” that they can switch to another flight ( same city pairs) within seven days of the original for no additional cost.

Passengers have another option, too: a refund. The U. S. Department of Transporta­tion says a consumer is entitled to a refund if the airline made a significant schedule change and the consumer chooses not to travel.

The problem: It does not define “significant.”

JetBlue’s Hayes called the flight cuts a “reset” and says he is confident “this puts us on the right path.”

Most airlines started off April with a rash of cancellati­ons due to storms in Florida, but JetBlue’s troubles lingered throughout the month, with the airline stranding travelers across the country, sometimes for a couple days, during the spring break travel rush.

JetBlue has canceled 8% of its flights in April and delayed an additional 40%, according to flight tracker FlightAwar­e.

JetBlue President Joanna Geraghty apologized to employees in an email this month, saying poor weather and Air Traffic Control delays have led to “cascading problems” this month, and she and Hayes apologized again on Tuesday.

JetBlue is also dealing with a pilots leaving given the industry pilot shortage as well as pilot training bottleneck­s. The airline’s pilots union is fed up. On Monday, the pilot union leadership at JetBlue issued a vote of no confidence in the JetBlue executive in charge of airports and system operations. They said the airline’s reputation has suffered from all the flight troubles.

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