The
flights cancelled by 8 pm GMT on Sunday included over 2,400
entering, departing from or within the United States, according
to tracking website FlightAware.com. Globally, more than 11,200
flights were delayed.
Among the airlines with most cancellations were SkyWest and
SouthWest, with 510 and 419 cancellations respectively,
FlightAware showed.
The Christmas and New Year holidays are typically a peak time
for air travel, but the rapid spread of the highly transmissible
Omicron variant has led to a sharp increase in COVID-19
infections, forcing airlines to cancel flights as pilots and
cabin crew quarantine.
Transportation agencies across the United States were also
suspending or reducing services due to coronavirus-related staff
shortages.
Omicron has brought record case counts and dampened New Year
festivities around much of the world.
The rise in U.S. COVID cases had caused some companies to change
plans to increase the number of employees working from their
offices from Monday.
U.S. authorities registered at least 346,869 new coronavirus on
Saturday, according to a Reuters tally. The U.S. death toll from
COVID-19 rose by at least 377 to 828,562.
U.S. airline cabin crew, pilots and support staff were reluctant
to work overtime during the holidays, despite offers of hefty
financial incentives. Many feared contracting COVID-19 and did
not welcome the prospect of dealing with unruly passengers, some
airline unions said.
In the months preceding the holidays, airlines were wooing
employees to ensure solid staffing, after furloughing or laying
off thousands over the last 18 months as the pandemic hobbled
the industry.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Kevin
Liffey, Mark Porter and Daniel Wallis)
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