US airlines cancel more flights over Omicron surge, winter weather – New York Post

An ongoing wave of US flight cancellations continued Wednesday as embattled airlines grapple with winter storms and staffing shortages due to a surge in COVID-19 cases.

More than 1,600 flights within, into or out of the United States were canceled as of midday Wednesday, according to tracking data from FlightAware. Additionally, more than 2,500 US flights were delayed.

The latest round of cancellations occurred as winter weather battered much of the Midwest and the East Coast. Airlines are also struggling to fill out flight schedules amid crew shortages driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant.

Flight schedule disruptions have persisted in January after widespread complications during the busy holiday travel period. Airlines have canceled more than 1,000 US flights for 11 consecutive days.

A flight information board shows data about various flights including a cancellation of a Spirit airline trip
More than 1,600 flights within, into or out of the US were canceled as of midday Wednesday.
Getty Images

Southwest Airlines canceled 508 flights as of Wednesday afternoon, or 16% of its planned schedule for the day. The company’s stock sank less than 1% as of midday trading.

United Airlines canceled 157 flights, or 7% of its slate. Shares were flat.

A passenger checks airline departure board inside an airport
Airlines have been scrambling to keep up with flights as bad weather and a COVID surge batter the US.
AP

Alaska Airlines canceled 112 flights, while Delta Air Lines canceled 41 and American Airlines canceled 17. JetBlue did not appear on FlightAware’s tracker after canceling dozens of flights in recent days.

Several airlines have taken steps to address ongoing and future staffing shortages. Earlier this week, JetBlue confirmed to The Post that it has preemptively canceled hundreds of flights scheduled through Jan. 13. The company cited the impact to its crews and noted its decision was meant to allow customers to alter their plans.

Multiple airlines, including United and Spirit Airlines, have boosted pay for their crews in a bid to address the shortages.

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