Flight cancellations pile up as winter storm, 737 Max 9 grounding disrupt travel
Airlines canceled more than 3,000 US flights Friday as they grappled with winter weather and the grounding of Boeing 737 Max 9 planes. Storms in the Midwest helped drive more than 8,400 delays, with disruptions around Chicago and Detroit, major hubs for the largest US carriers, according to flight-tracker FlightAware. Disruptions continued, with 1,700 cancellations and more than 700 delays as of Saturday morning. About 40% of flights at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, a hub for United Airlines and American Airlines, were canceled after a snowstorm led to an over two-hour ground stop. Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, a Delta hub, had more than half of flights Friday either delayed or canceled due to the storms. Southwest Airlines, which has a big operation out of Chicago Midway, canceled more than 400 flights, while over 1,500 were delayed. United canceled about 10% of its mainline flights and delayed about 30%. Last week, the FAA grounded Boeing 737 Max 9s so the jets could undergo inspections after a door plug blew off an Alaska Airlines flight. That grounding has continued to disrupt travel for United and Alaska Airlines, the only US airlines operating the aircraft. Airlines are awaiting the FAA’s approval of inspection instructions from Boeing. The FAA said late Friday that it needed more data on inspections before it could approve those directions. United Airlines said it canceled flights scheduled to use a Max 9 through Tuesday. It has about 200 flights a day scheduled on the aircraft but it will use another plane for 30 of those flights. “By canceling this far in advance, we’re trying to create more certainty for our customers and more flexibility for our frontline teams to do their work,” United said late Friday. “Those things will be especially important as we also manage disruptive winter weather throughout much of the country.”<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-01-15/star/flight-cancellations-pile-up-as-winter-storm-737-max-9-grounding-disrupt-travel
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Flight cancellations pile up as winter storm, 737 Max 9 grounding disrupt travel
Airlines canceled more than 3,000 US flights Friday as they grappled with winter weather and the grounding of Boeing 737 Max 9 planes. Storms in the Midwest helped drive more than 8,400 delays, with disruptions around Chicago and Detroit, major hubs for the largest US carriers, according to flight-tracker FlightAware. Disruptions continued, with 1,700 cancellations and more than 700 delays as of Saturday morning. About 40% of flights at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, a hub for United Airlines and American Airlines, were canceled after a snowstorm led to an over two-hour ground stop. Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, a Delta hub, had more than half of flights Friday either delayed or canceled due to the storms. Southwest Airlines, which has a big operation out of Chicago Midway, canceled more than 400 flights, while over 1,500 were delayed. United canceled about 10% of its mainline flights and delayed about 30%. Last week, the FAA grounded Boeing 737 Max 9s so the jets could undergo inspections after a door plug blew off an Alaska Airlines flight. That grounding has continued to disrupt travel for United and Alaska Airlines, the only US airlines operating the aircraft. Airlines are awaiting the FAA’s approval of inspection instructions from Boeing. The FAA said late Friday that it needed more data on inspections before it could approve those directions. United Airlines said it canceled flights scheduled to use a Max 9 through Tuesday. It has about 200 flights a day scheduled on the aircraft but it will use another plane for 30 of those flights. “By canceling this far in advance, we’re trying to create more certainty for our customers and more flexibility for our frontline teams to do their work,” United said late Friday. “Those things will be especially important as we also manage disruptive winter weather throughout much of the country.”<br/>