US airlines forecast record 2024 summer travel, up 6.3% over last year
A group representing major US airlines forecast record summer travel with carriers expected to transport 271m passengers, up 6.3% from last year. Airlines for America said Tuesday that U.S. carriers plan to fly more than 26,000 daily flights this summer, up nearly 1,400 over 2023, or 5.6%, when they carried 255m passengers. The summer travel season forecast is for June 1 to Aug. 31. American Airlines said it will boost flights by 10% this summer. United Airlines is forecasting a record-setting 3m travelers expected to fly during the May 23-28 Memorial Day travel period, up nearly 10%. Delta Air Lines said it expects a 5% jump in Memorial Day weekend customers to nearly 3m customers between May 23-27. The forecast comes as the FAA is struggling to address a persistent shortage of air traffic controllers. Some airlines voluntarily trimmed New York flights last summer to address congestion issues. The FAA said in March it would relocate control of the Newark, New Jersey, airspace area to Philadelphia to address staffing and congested New York City area traffic by June 30. Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand and other lawmakers last week urged the FAA to rescind plans to force 17 air traffic controllers to move from New York Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) to Philadelphia. At several facilities, controllers are working mandatory overtime and six-day work weeks to cover shortages. The FAA agency is about 3,000 controllers behind staffing targets and the agency said last autumn it had about 10,700 certified controllers - about the same as a year earlier.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-05-15/general/us-airlines-forecast-record-2024-summer-travel-up-6-3-over-last-year
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US airlines forecast record 2024 summer travel, up 6.3% over last year
A group representing major US airlines forecast record summer travel with carriers expected to transport 271m passengers, up 6.3% from last year. Airlines for America said Tuesday that U.S. carriers plan to fly more than 26,000 daily flights this summer, up nearly 1,400 over 2023, or 5.6%, when they carried 255m passengers. The summer travel season forecast is for June 1 to Aug. 31. American Airlines said it will boost flights by 10% this summer. United Airlines is forecasting a record-setting 3m travelers expected to fly during the May 23-28 Memorial Day travel period, up nearly 10%. Delta Air Lines said it expects a 5% jump in Memorial Day weekend customers to nearly 3m customers between May 23-27. The forecast comes as the FAA is struggling to address a persistent shortage of air traffic controllers. Some airlines voluntarily trimmed New York flights last summer to address congestion issues. The FAA said in March it would relocate control of the Newark, New Jersey, airspace area to Philadelphia to address staffing and congested New York City area traffic by June 30. Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand and other lawmakers last week urged the FAA to rescind plans to force 17 air traffic controllers to move from New York Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) to Philadelphia. At several facilities, controllers are working mandatory overtime and six-day work weeks to cover shortages. The FAA agency is about 3,000 controllers behind staffing targets and the agency said last autumn it had about 10,700 certified controllers - about the same as a year earlier.<br/>