SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Northwest Airlines Corp. cancelled as many as 200 flights over the weekend, pointing to empty cockpits as the culprit.
At the peak of the summer travel season, Northwest said it is seeing a big jump in absenteeism among the crews that fly its narrow-bodied jets, which means the shortage is hurting mainly domestic rather than international flights.
The result is thousands of stranded passengers at airports across the country.
"Friday morning we saw a sharp spike in pilot absenteeism. We flew about 93% of our scheduled flights on Friday and about the same yesterday. We expect that to go to about 91% today," Northwest spokesman Roman Blahoski told MarketWatch.
The problem stems from over-scheduling. And it's not new. Northwest saw the problem flare up in late June, when the number of pilots staying at home jumped 80% from a year earlier.
Pilots are allowed to fly just so many hours during the course of a month. At Northwest, the maximum number of hours the airline scheduled for flight crews in June was 88 to 90. That was apparently too much.
To help ease the problem, Northwest whittled down their July flight schedule, a move they are again taking in August, further reducing the amount of time pilots are to be in the cockpit to 86 hours. The net impact on Northwest's schedule will be about a 4% reduction next month in domestic flights.
Northwest would not disclose the number of flights it cancelled over the weekend, but the Web site FlightStats.com reported the carrier scrubbed 166 flights on Saturday.
Northwest said it has about 1,300 flights scheduled for Sunday. If it only expects to complete 91%, that translates to about 117 cancellations. While some are due to weather or air traffic control, the vast majority are due to the pilot shortage, Lahaska said.
Northwest (NWA17.98, -1.01, -5.3% ) , which emerged from bankruptcy at the end of May, has about 5,000 active pilots on its payroll.
The Air Line Pilots Association, which has a long history of tangling with Northwest management, has earlier accused the Egan, Minn.-based carrier of setting an unrealistic schedule given the number of pilots it employs.
Jim Jelter is Industrials Editor for MarketWatch in San Francisco.
2 comments:
Rumor has it that an airline in Hotlanta is cancelling 50 flights a day due to lack of pilots.
well, they didn't make any headlines
i had 3 guys trying to get to canadia on Northworst the day this news hit
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