Business

60 Flights Out of RDU Canceled Due to Northeast Storm

Weather causes many other cancellations across the U.S. Among most affected airlines was JetBlue, which canceled more than 200 flights.

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JETBLUE
RALEIGH, N.C. — Some 60 departing flights out of Raleigh-Durham International Airport were canceled on Friday due to weather.

All the flights served destination in the northeast, especially airports in New York City and Philadelphia, according to RDU spokesperson Mindy Hamlin.

Hamlin advised passengers traveling over the next few days to contact their airline carrier before going to the airport.

Among the most affected airlines was JetBlue, which canceled 215 flights, aiming to avoid the days of cancellations and criticism that followed a storm last month, an airline spokesman said.
Northwest Airlines had canceled about 35 flights to or from the East Coast, all but a handful of them at Kennedy and the New York City area's two other major airports, LaGuardia and Newark Liberty International, spokeswoman Tracy Carlson said.

The cancellations affected about one-third of all JetBlue flights. More than 200 of them involved flights to or from New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, said company spokesman Sebastian White.


He said a few flights also were affected at New York's LaGuardia Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey, and Boston's Logan International Airport. In addition, the airline had canceled 15 flights Thursday night, White said.

Other airlines also reported cancellations, on a smaller scale. American Airlines had canceled about 120 flights to or from New York and other Northeastern airports as of Friday morning, said spokeswoman Sonja Whitemon.

JetBlue has been under pressure to do better in bad weather since passengers were stranded in planes at Kennedy for up to 10 1/2 hours during a storm last month. JetBlue was unable to resume normal operations for days afterward because flight crews weren't where they were supposed to be.

White said Friday's cancellations were intended to ensure that crews would be available where needed, and that departure gates would be free in case weather forced planes to return, he said.

"We're hopeful the plans we have in place will be effective and allow us to recover quickly," he said early Friday.

JetBlue has been striving to regain customers' esteem since a February 14 snow and ice storm left hundreds of passengers marooned on parked planes at Kennedy. The airline had hoped to get through the storm without canceling flights, but later acknowledged it waited too long to ask airport authorities for help getting passengers off the stranded planes.

"We've always tried to take a wait-and-see approach with the weather ... believing that people want to get to their destination late, rather than never," White said Friday. But since the February 14 storm - and the maelstrom of complaints that followed - JetBlue has had "a shift in thinking," he said.

The airline pre-emptively canceled 66 flights on February 26 because of snow. JetBlue representatives said the strategy succeeded in making sure the airline could resume normal service quickly, though some passengers expressed frustration.

In the last month, JetBlue also has unveiled a customer bill of rights that promises vouchers to passengers who experience delays. The airline also ran full-page newspaper advertisements apologizing to customers about the Valentine's Day problems.

Passengers whose flights were canceled Friday were offered refunds or a chance to rebook travel through April 30 without paying a fee for the change, White said.

New York-based JetBlue Airways Corp. normally operates about 600 flights a day to various destinations in the United States, Bermuda and the Caribbean.

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