Weather and staffing-led turbulence stretched into a fourth day for American Airlines, with the top U.S. carrier cancelling more flights on Monday to push the total number to nearly 2,300.
The airline said it canceled 340 flights, or 6% of its total planned flights on Monday, as of 11 a.m. ET.
→ American Airlines recovers 100% of its frequencies to Buenos Aires.
Staffing shortages have hit American Airlines, Southwest Airlines and Spirit Airlines in particular, as they ramp up flights ahead of the holiday season but face problems finding enough pilots and flight attendants, Reuters reported.
“Flight Attendant staffing at American is strained and reflects what is happening across the industry as we continue to deal with pandemic-related issues,” flight attendants’ union APFA said.
The cancellations are another setback to the Texas-based company, which is already reeling from rising fuel and labor costs impacting the industry as the U.S. prepares to open borders to fully vaccinated travelers.
→ American Airlines and IndiGo announce codeshare agreement.
“The airline had particular weather issues that then spiraled into rippled cancellations and were compounded by an inability to fill out schedules from their labor reserves,” UBS analyst Myles Walton said.
Severe winds at the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport reduced American’s arrival capacity by more than half, with the inclement weather also impacting staffing.
The company, however, hoped some of that impact could be mitigated with nearly 1,800 flight attendants returning from leave starting Monday.
“We expect considerable improvement beginning today with some residual impact from the weekend,” company spokeswoman Sarah Jantz said in a statement. American’s shares recovered losses to trade up 1%.
Meanwhile, rival airlines seemed to have fared better.
Delta Air Lines said on Monday it has not experienced any weather-related cancellations so far, while United Airlines said there were no “widespread cancellations”.
Photo: Tomas Del Coro/Wikimedia
Related Topics
Flybondi Announces Its First Route to Peru: It Will Connect Iguazú with Lima Starting in December
Satena Confirms Continuation of Its Direct Route Between Bogotá and Valencia, Venezuela
How Bogotá’s El Dorado Became Latin America’s Busiest Airport, Surpassing Mexico City and São Paulo
Avianca Announces Cancellation of Its Medellín – Lima Route

Plataforma Informativa de Aviación Comercial con 13 años de trayectoria.