US Airlines cancel over 1500 flights as passenger traffic pushes over 2.2 mn

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As the peak summer vacation season approaches, airlines in the United States have cancelled over 1,500 flights, making it one of the worst days for travel yet.

According to tracking service FlightAware, more than one-third of all flights at LaGuardia Airport in New York was cancelled, while more than one-fourth of planes were diverted to nearby Newark Liberty Airport in New Jersey.

The cancellations come less than three weeks after airlines began the summer travel season by cancelling more than 2,800 flights during a five-day period over Memorial Day weekend.

And they happened as airline CEOs held a virtual meeting with Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg – a sign of the Biden administration’s concern about the prospect of snarled airports and unhappy travellers this summer.

During the meeting, which took place by videoconference, Buttigieg asked the CEOs to describe steps they are taking to operate smoothly over the July 4 holiday and the rest of the summer, according to a person familiar with the call but not authorized to discuss it publicly.

Buttigieg also pushed airlines to examine whether they can handle the schedules that they have published and to improve customer service, the person said.

The head of trade group Airlines for America, Nicholas Calio, said in a statement that industry officials appreciated the chance to talk with Buttigieg and discuss our shared commitment to prioritising the safety and security of all travellers.

Airlines are struggling with shortages of workers, especially pilots, that are hurting their ability to operate all their planned flights. Pilot unions at Delta, American and Southwest have said their airlines were too slow to replace pilots who retired or took leaves of absence during the early part of the pandemic.

Two Senate Democrats said this month that the holiday weekend performance raises questions about airline decision-making. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Edward Markey of Massachusetts said delays and cancellations “are occurring so frequently that they are becoming an almost-expected part of travel.”

The airlines blame bad weather and the Federal Aviation Administration, an arm of the Transportation Department that manages the nation’s airspace. In a letter to the senators, Calio ticked off a long list of FAA delays and staffing problems over the holiday weekend.

The airlines have jousted with the FAA this spring over delays in Florida, where air travel recovered more quickly than in many other parts of the country. After meeting with airline representatives in May, the FAA agreed to increase staffing at an air-traffic control centre near Jacksonville and make other changes.

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