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Air travel hits snags. Which solutions will take off?

A late-June tide of flight delays and cancellations has signaled the risk of more summer air travel disruptions, raising questions around responsibility and long-term solutions.  

The recent flight troubles developed from a combination of weather-related uncertainties, surging demand from airline passengers, and industry challenges with labor supply and technology. The structural challenges won’t be quick to fix, some experts say.  

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Travelers are facing waves of cancellations and delays as air travel surges. Behind the short-term inconveniences are larger staffing and technology challenges.

“It’s going to take time to find lasting solutions to the problems that we have right now,” says Stephen West, director of the Air Traffic Collegiate Training Initiative at the University of Oklahoma.

Weather is the leading cause of air travel disruptions, but the risks are being amplified currently by a tight supply of key personnel – and in some cases also by wobbly computer systems.

There are a range of ways for airlines to improve, including by updating crew scheduling technology, wrote Scott Kirby, United Airlines CEO, in a July 1 letter. Other observers have called for equipment upgrades industrywide. The Federal Aviation Administration plans to increase its annual hiring of controllers. 

Ariana Duran, a marketing specialist who lives near Orlando, Florida, plans to conduct more consumer-protection homework ahead of future air travel, after her recent flight home was delayed 11 times.  

Several days of held-up holiday air travel, due to storms and logistics, have given way to slightly bluer skies this week. But the late-June tide of flight delays and cancellations has signaled the risk of more summer disruptions.

This is raising questions around responsibility and long-term solutions. That’s because the industry faces a confluence of weather-related uncertainties, surging demand from airline passengers, and challenges with labor supply and technology. The structural challenges won’t be quick to fix, experts say.  

“It’s going to take time to find lasting solutions to the problems that we have right now,” says Stephen West, director of the Air Traffic Collegiate Training Initiative at the University of Oklahoma.

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A story focused on

Travelers are facing waves of cancellations and delays as air travel surges. Behind the short-term inconveniences are larger staffing and technology challenges.

Americans, meanwhile, are raring to jet – and experts expect demand to continue to soar. Following the official end of the COVID-19 public health emergency this spring, a record number of people – nearly 2.9 million individuals – were screened at airport checkpoints last Friday, surpassing a 2019 high. 

People are purchasing flights “albeit the prices are higher,” says Paula Twidale, senior vice president of travel at AAA. “Keep in mind, also, that they’ve saved a lot of money not traveling for a couple years.”

Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

A traveler checks the status of their flight at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, June 30, 2023.

That demand collided with factors like storms in the Northeast and reports of staffing issues. In the week leading up to July 4, more than 47,000 flights were delayed and some 4,000 were canceled, according to FlightAware, an aviation intelligence company. While cancellations have dipped from 4.5% last Wednesday to around 2% yesterday, delayed arrivals still hover at about a quarter of scheduled flights.

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