For third day, COVID-19 crimps Americans' holiday travels
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[December 27, 2021]
By Humeyra Pamuk and Gabriella Borter
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S.
airlines canceled more than 1,300 flights on Sunday as COVID-19 thinned
out the number of available crews, while several cruise ships had to
cancel stops after outbreaks on board, upending the plans of thousands
of Christmas travelers.
Commercial airlines had canceled 1,318 flights within, into or out of
the United States by mid-afternoon, according to a tally on
flight-tracking website FlightAware.com.
At least three cruise ships were also forced to return to port without
making scheduled port calls after COVID-19 cases were detected on board,
according to multiple media reports.
It was the third straight day of pain for some Americans traveling over
the weekend as the Christmas holidays, typically a peak time for travel,
coincided with a rapid spread of the Omicron variant nationwide.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease official, warned
of rising U.S. cases in coming days and potentially
"overrun...hospitals, particularly in those regions in which you have a
larger proportion of unvaccinated individuals."
"It likely will go much higher," he said of the Omicron-driven surge
even as President Joe Biden last week unveiled new actions aimed at
containing the latest wave and continued urging vaccinations and other
prevention strategies.
With rising infections, airlines have been forced to cancel flights with
pilots and cabin crew needing to quarantine while poor weather in some
areas added to travelers woes.
Enjoli Rodriguez, 25, whose Delta Air Lines Inc flight from Los Angeles
to Lexington, Kentucky, was canceled on Christmas Eve, was one of
thousands still stranded on Sunday.
Delta rebooked Rodriguez through Detroit, but that flight was delayed so
she missed the connection.
Speaking from the Detroit airport on Sunday, Rodriguez said she was
surrounded by angry passengers, flustered airline representatives and
families with young children in limbo.
"I’ve run into a lot of people sharing their horror stories here. We’re
all just stuck in Michigan, Detroit, heading different places,”
Rodriguez, who was rebooked on a later flight to Kentucky, told Reuters.
A total of 997 flights were scrapped on Christmas Day and nearly 700 on
Christmas Eve. Thousands more were delayed on all three days.
A Delta Airlines spokesperson said "winter weather in portions of the
U.S. and the Omicron variant continued to impact" its holiday weekend
flight schedule but that it was working to "reroute and substitute
aircraft and crews."
United Airlines also said it was working to rebook impacted passengers,
while a Southwest Airlines spokesperson said its cancellations were all
weather related.
Overall, U.S. airports most heavily impacted were in Seattle, Atlanta,
Los Angeles, Dallas-Fort Worth and JFK International in New York.
A White House official, who asked not to be named, said the
administration was monitoring the delays closely but noted that while
they can disrupt plans "only a small percentage of flights are
affected."
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Passengers line up at John F. Kennedy International Airport during
the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant in Queens, New York
City, U.S., December 26, 2021. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
Delta on Sunday canceled 167 flights
or 6%; United canceled 115 flights or 5% and American canceled 83
flights or 2%, according to FlightAware.
Globally, 3,023 flights were called off and more
than 13,742 were delayed, as of 8:15 p.m. EST on Sunday (0015 GMT
Monday), FlightAware data showed.
COVID HITS CRUISES
Meanwhile, a Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd cruise ship turned back to
Ft. Lauderdale, CNN reported, and on Sunday a Carnival Corp ship
returned to Miami after COVID was detected onboard, although it was
unclear if the cases were Omicron.
Carnival said "a small number on board were isolated due to a
positive COVID test" on board its Carnival Freedom ship, which again
left Miami later on Sunday for its next trip with another round of
passengers.
"The rapid spread of the Omicron variant may shape how some
destination authorities with limited medical resources may view even
a small number of cases, even when they are being managed with our
vigorous protocols. Should it be necessary to cancel a port, we will
do our best to find an alternative destination," it said in a
statement.
A Holland America ship also returned to San Diego on Sunday after
Mexican authorities banned it from docking in Puerto Vallarta citing
onboard cases, NBC News and Fox News reported. Carnival, which owns
Holland America, did not address that reported incident in its
statement.
Representatives for Royal Caribbean did not respond to a request for
comment.
Overall, COVID-19 outbreaks altered at least six sailings in the
past week, the Washington Post reported, echoing the turmoil facing
the industry after COVID erupted in early 2020.
Testing woes have compounded the travel angst, as many Americans
scrambled for their status amid long lines and lack of at-home test
kits amid the holiday travels.
"We've obviously got to do better. I mean, I think things will
improve greatly as we get into January, but that doesn't help us
today and tomorrow," Fauci told ABC's "This Week."
Meanwhile, some states are already bracing for the upcoming New
Year's holiday weekend, warning residents to reduce potential
exposure to the virus.
"Omicron is surging statewide," Louisiana's health department
tweeted on Sunday, noting Omicron-related hospitalizations had
doubled in the past week. "We are urging everyone to take safety
precautions ahead of New Year’s Eve."
(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk and Gabriella Borter; Additional
reporting by Kanishka Singh, Diane Bartz and Karen Brettell;
additional writing by Susan Heavey; Editing by Kieran Murray, Daniel
Wallis, Mark Porter and Diane Craft)
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