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Delays hint at hard summer for air travelers
Southwest, American trim schedules
Associated Press
Jul. 6, 2021 4:14 pm
This summer already is shaping up to be a difficult one for air travelers.
Southwest Airlines customers have struggled with thousands of delays and hundreds of canceled flights in the past three weeks because of computer problems, staffing shortages and bad weather.
American Airlines, which flies to Cedar Rapids’ Eastern Iowa Airport, also is grappling with a surge in delays, and it has trimmed its schedule through mid-July at least in part because it doesn't have enough pilots, according to the pilots' union.
At the same time, the number of Americans getting on planes is at a pandemic-era high.
Just under 2.2 million travelers were screened at U.S. airports on Friday — the highest number since early March 2020.
Travelers are posting photos of long airport lines and describing painful flights.
In addition, airlines have seen a surge in unruly passengers, and some experts predict it will get worse this summer as planes become even more crowded.
There have been more than a dozen days in June and July when more than 2 million travelers went through U.S. airports, according to figures from the Transportation Security Administration.
Airlines said domestic leisure travel is back to 2019 levels, although the lack of business travelers means that overall the number of passengers over the past week still is down slightly compared with the same days in 2019.
For the July Fourth weekend, U.S. airlines scheduled nearly twice as many flights between Thursday and Monday as they did over the same days last year, according to data from aviation researcher Cirium.
The weekend highlights the rapid turnaround boosting an industry that was fighting for survival last year. The recovery has been faster than many expected — including, apparently, the airlines themselves.
Airlines this summer already are struggling to keep up with the rising number of passengers. Above, Salt Lake City International Airport this past Thursday. (Associated Press)

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