American Airlines chops 83,000 flights from its October
schedule
The Fort Worth-based carrier had once forecasted having more flights
than
any other airline during the fall month. But demand is difficult to
predict
in the COVID-19 era and airlines are adjusting - aggressively.
American
Airlines has cut 83,000 domestic flights from its
October schedule during the
last two weeks even as it holds
onto hope that another round of federal
stimulus grants
could save jobs and service to some cities.
Fort
Worth-based American Airlines has cut its global
schedule by 55% from a year
ago for the October month, the
company confirmed, including a 48% decrease in
domestic
flying as the COVID-19 pandemic shows no signs of letting
up and
passengers show little eagerness to return to the
skies.
It leaves
American with about 99,000 flights for October,
slightly more than it has
planned for a slimmed down
September schedule. The carrier continues to
shrink its
schedules the closer it gets to the actual month of flying,
an
indication of how tricky it is to forecast demand during a
global
health pandemic, said Jeff Pelletier, managing
director of Dallas-based
Airline Data Inc.
More cuts could be coming, Pelletier said. American
still
has hundreds of flights on the schedule for 15 cities where it
wants
to halt service in early October.
"While there have been numerous press
releases on the
removal of flights to the 15 stations throughout
their
network in October, what AA has actually done is they
haven't yet
pulled the schedule," Pelletier said. "The
schedules are still intact, just
at reduced frequencies, in the
hopes that Congress may come back with some
money."
American has also recently cut 9,000 flights from its
November
plans, too, but will likely make more reductions
as the usually busy holiday
month gets closer, he said.
The barebones schedule shows just how
conservative
airlines are being as fall approaches after planning
an
Airlines are scheduling thousands of fights only
to be
canceled.
American Airlines, along with Delta and Southwest, have
recently pulled
thousands of ights from October schedules. This graph shows
just how man
ights are being scheduled through January, even if many of them
may get
pulled because of weak demand.
On Tuesday, only 516,000
passengers went through TSA
security checkpoints at U.S. airports. That's the
lowest
passenger count since mid-July. Numbers are down partly
because
summer travel is mostly over as public schools and
colleges begin
instruction, but also because few business
travelers are getting on planes
now to go to meetings and
sales trips.
Even American Airlines'
fortress hub at DFW International
Airport is suffering. American's departures
at DFW are
down 24% year over year, Pelletier said. As a share
of
American's flight schedule, it's actually increased flights to
DFW and
its other major hub in Charlotte, N.C. But the
shrinking pie has meant
smaller pieces for everyone.
American has cut traffic from DFW the most to
its other
major hubs, particularly in New York City, Chicago, Los
Angeles
and Washington, D.C.
In fact, American has cut its schedule in D.C. by
80%
compared to a year ago. In Texas, American's service to
Austin has
also been cut deeply, down about 41% year-overyear.
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