A
spokeswoman for American, the world's largest airline, said the
company had canceled 848 flights as of 3:00 p.m. EST (1900 GMT)
Sunday, more than 16% of its total. That follows 548 trips
canceled by American on Saturday, and 343 on Friday. Sunday's
figure could change as the day goes on.
In a letter to employees on Saturday, the Fort Worth,
Texas-based company said severe winds at Dallas/Fort Worth
International Airport reduced arrival capacity by more than
half. Additional inclement weather means "our staffing begins to
run tight as crew members end up out of their regular flight
sequences," the letter said.
Airlines have been tight on staffing due to the coronavirus
pandemic that drastically reduced demand for air travel. As
normal life resumes, many are ramping back up.
In Saturday's letter, American said nearly 1,800 flight
attendants are returning from leave starting on Monday, while
more than 600 newly hired flight attendants will be coming on
board by the end of the year.
The airline had offered voluntary leave to some employees to
help weather the pandemic. It also furloughed 17,500 employees,
though those people are now back to work, a company spokeswoman
told Reuters on Sunday.
Southwest Airlines Co has also said it is hiring aggressively,
aiming to add 5,000 new workers by the end of 2021.
Earlier this month, Southwest canceled nearly 2,400 flights over
a three-day period, blaming bad weather and air traffic issues
in Florida.
(Reporting by Nicholas P. Brown in New York; additional
reporting by Maria Ponnezhath in Bengaluru and David Shepardson
in Washington; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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