OnsceneALERT
Oct 12, 20212 min
CRITICAL INCIDENT NOTIFICATION
AVIATION INCIDENT
Southwest Airlines canceled several hundred more flights Monday following a weekend of major disruptions that it blamed on bad weather and air traffic control issues.
The company and the pilots union said the cancellations were not in response to the airline’s decision to mandate vaccinations.
Southwest canceled more than 360 flights — 10% of its schedule for the day — on Monday, and more than 1,000 others were delayed, according to the FlightAware tracking service.
The third straight day of large-scale cancellations left thousands of passengers stranded and upset.
Photo Credit: AP Photo/David Zalubowski
“My concern is we had no explanation really that was, I feel, very legitimate or believable,” said Brian Gesch of Cedar Grove, Wis., who was traveling through Reagan Washington National Airport with his wife. He doubted that weather and air traffic controllers were the real issue. “So we are frustrated and missing a day of work.”
Some were less concerned about the cause than just getting home.
“I’m not sure what’s going on,” said Sean Merrell of Frisco, Texas, “but as long as I can get back to Dallas, it’s all that matters to me.”
The widespread disruptions began shortly after the union for Southwest’s 9,000 pilots asked a federal court on Friday to block the airline’s order that all employees get vaccinated against COVID-19. The union said it doesn’t oppose vaccination, but it argued in its filing that Southwest must negotiate before taking such a step.
Pilots are not conducting a sickout or slowdown to protest the vaccine mandate, according to the union, which said it “has not authorized, and will not condone, any job action.”
The pilots association offered another explanation: It said Southwest’s operation “has become brittle and subject to massive failures under the slightest pressure” because of a lack of support from the company. The union complained about the “already strained relationship” between it and the company.
Airlines persuaded thousands of workers to take leaves of absence during the pandemic. Unions at Southwest and American have argued that management was too slow to bring pilots back, leaving them short-handed.
Alan Kasher, Southwest’s executive vice president of daily operations, said the airline was staffed for the weekend but got tripped up by air-traffic control issues and bad weather in Florida and couldn’t recover quickly. Because of cutbacks during the pandemic, he noted the airline has fewer flights to accommodate stranded passengers.
“The weekend challenges were not a result of Southwest employee demonstrations,” airline spokesman Chris Mainz said.
Source Agency (Boston Herald)
Sourcing Link (Boston Herald)
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Incident Number
2-211011-3801
Alert Type
Critical Incident Notification
Incident Type
Aviation Incident
Incident Occurred
October 10, 2021
Alert Posted
October 11, 2021
8:28 pm CST
Last Updated
October 11, 2021
8:28 pm CST
Incident Location
Dallas, TX
END OF ALERT