10,000 Flights Delayed Over Holiday Weekend As Aviation Chaos Concerns White HouseĀ 

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10,000 Flights Delayed Over Holiday Weekend As Aviation Chaos Concerns White HouseĀ 

Travel chaos impacted thousands of Americans trying to catch a flight during the Father’s DayĀ and Juneteenth holiday weekend.

Flight tracking website FlightAware shows more than 10,000 flights were delayed or canceled nationwide between Friday and Sunday due to pilot shortages and bad weather, which comes days after top airline executives spoke with Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg about how to resolveĀ flight disruptions.Ā 

“That isĀ happening to a lot of people, and that is exactly why we are paying close attention here to what can be done and how to make sure that the airlines are delivering,” Buttigieg told The Associated Press in an interview Saturday.Ā 

Buttigieg said he could penalize airlines that fail to meet consumer-protection standards.

According to data from the Transport Security Administration, passenger throughput at U.S. security checkpoints at airports topped nearly 2.4 million on Friday, the highest checkpoint volume since the Sunday after Thanksgiving and 100,000 more travelers than the Friday before Memorial Day weekend.Ā 

Constant flight disruptions are caused by staffing shortages, bad weather, and reduced flights and come at a time when airlines can barely keep up with demand.

The origins of the shortage began in the early days of the virus pandemic when pilot hiring, training, and licensing came to a standstill. Then airlines forced thousands of pilots into early retirement to reduce labor costs as travel demand cratered.Ā 

Recently, United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby told investors that theĀ shortage could last for years.Ā 

“The pilotĀ shortage for the industry is real, and most airlines are simply not going to be able toĀ realize their capacity plansĀ because there simplyĀ aren’t enough pilots, at least not for theĀ next five-plus years,” Kirby said.

Kit Darby, a pilot pay consultant and a retired United captain,Ā warnedĀ that “there is no quick fix” for the pilot shortage.Ā 

This weekend, videos posted on social media show long lines and frustrated passengers.Ā 

The combination of reduced flights, pilot shortage, soaring jet fuel costs, and robust flying demand has sent ticket prices sky-high.Ā 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 06/20/2022 – 15:50


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