Air travel chaos continues amid COVID-19 surge, labor shortage

In This Article:

Yahoo Finance's Adam Shapiro details the continued airline confusion travelers and staff are experiencing as flights are still being delayed or cancelled due to Omicron concerns and inclement weather patterns, in addition to commenting on the airlines' labor shortage issues and new COVID-19 testing policies.

Video Transcript

- Airlines continue to be in flight cancelation mode. JetBlue is reportedly reducing its flight schedule through January 13 by nearly 1,300 flights as the omicron variant rips through its staff. Yahoo Finance anchor Adam Shapiro is here with more. Adam, is there any relief in sight here?

ADAM SHAPIRO: For whom? For the passengers or for the airlines? First, let's talk about the stock price for the airlines right now because if we can pull that up, you're going to see that the airline shares are actually trading a little bit higher right now. They've been taking a beating for the last couple of days, especially because of the cancelations. It depends which airline you ask.

For instance, in the cases of Delta, they're talking about it being a contributing factor of both their staff getting ill, but also there have been real bad weather problems out West. Sea-Tac Airport up in the Northwest has been a problem because of snow in that part of the world. So where do we stand right now? First, let me give you the overall TSA numbers because the number of people going through airport checkpoints is still pretty high, especially when you compare it to 2019. Just yesterday, we had 2,049,000 people go through security at airports. In 2019, it would have been 200,000, 300,000. And the numbers have actually been very close, despite the cancelations, to 2019.

So where do we stand with this weekend? I'm going to quote from Delta Airlines. It's not encouraging. For the upcoming weekend, Delta projects daily cancelations between 200, 300 flights out of more than 4,000 total daily departures as teams across our system continue to do all possible to mitigate constraints from increasing winter weather and the omicron variant.

Delta, by the way, is going to report earnings for the fourth quarter on January 13. They're always the first to do that. So we're going to get a sense of what's really going on, especially as we look forward to bookings. If you get canceled, each airline has a different policy regarding cancelations, whether it be Delta, American, Southwest, United. For instance, if you just Google your airline and then cancelation policy, your eyes will bug out trying to make heads or tails of this. But I've pulled up the United refund policy.