Above, a social distanced flight. Photo by Armand Vaquer. |
Last summer, disruptions of flights in the western half of the U.S. due to thunderstorms were quite, um, something. I got stuck overnight in Salt Lake City as I missed my connecting flight to Albuquerque because of them.
But as disruptive that episode was (for me), it pales in comparison to what it happening now with air travel.
And it continues.
From Moody on the Market:
(NEW YORK) — The omicron variant continues to wreak havoc on holiday travel from coast to coast.
Over the weekend, airlines reported more than 3,000 flight cancellations with at least one stop in the U.S, according to FlightAware, and the travel troubles don’t seem to be letting up anytime soon. As of 11:30 a.m. Monday morning, nearly 1,000 flights had already been canceled, and the number was steadily creeping up by the hour.
United, Delta, JetBlue, American and Alaska cited the recent COVID-19 surge as one of the reasons for the cancellations because it has left them with crew shortages. In an effort to avoid more disruptions, JetBlue and Alaska have even resorted to offering extra pay to healthy employees who can pick up additional shifts.
Winter weather in the western part of the country didn’t help — slamming airports in Seattle, Los Angeles and Denver. Those three airports accounted for more than 600 flight cancellations on Sunday alone.
Glad I stayed home this year.
To read more, go here.
UPDATE (12-28-21):
From KVIA: 2,800 more flights cancelled today.
Details, go here.
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