JetBlue is cutting its summer schedule to avoid further flight disruptions

Business

In this article

JetBlue planes at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport
Leslie Josephs | CNBC

JetBlue Airways is planning to trim its summer schedule to avoid flight disruptions as it scrambles to hire ahead of what executives expect to be a monster peak travel season.

“We’ve already reduced May capacity 8-10% and you can expect to see a similar size capacity pull for the remainder of the summer,” Joanna Geraghty, JetBlue’s COO and president, said in an email to staff on Saturday, which was seen by CNBC.

Airlines are scrambling to staff up to handle a surge in travelers this spring and summer. Staffing shortages contributed to hundreds of flight cancellations and delays last summer and airlines executives have been looking for ways to avoid a repeat.

“Despite these challenges and, based on your feedback that the schedule is wound too tight, we know the best plan is to reduce capacity now,” Geraghty wrote. “I think everyone recognizes that the industry still remains very much in recovery mode, so we believe this proactive step is the right decision.”

JetBlue didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

In her email, Geraghty said New York-based JetBlue has hired 2,500 people so far this year and is still short-staffed. She added that the airline will share other measures to avoid disruptions with staff in the coming weeks.

“In the meantime, any and all ideas are welcome,” she wrote. 

JetBlue last week disclosed a $3.6 billion bid for budget carrier Spirit Airlines, throwing into question that discount airline’s deal to merge with fellow ultra-low-cost carrier Frontier Airlines.

U.S. airline executives will detail their staffing and capacity plans starting this week when Delta Air Lines reports first-quarter results. Other carriers report later in the month.

Articles You May Like

Disney debuts its latest cruise ship, Treasure, as part of a plan to double its fleet by 2031
GM lays off 1,000 employees amid reorganization, cost-cutting
SpaceX president says ‘there is plenty of room for competition,’ as Starlink nears 5 million customers
Some market experts are talking about ‘animal spirits.’ Here’s what that means when it comes to investing
Top Wall Street analysts are upbeat on these stocks for the long haul

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *