Grounded flights may pull down wider economy
Politicians bicker with FAA as lost productivity, undelivered cargo mount
![]() Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP Mass cancellations are "catastrophic economically, and it's an embarrassment to the nation," Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., said during a Capitol Hill hearing with FAA officials Thursday. |
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WASHINGTON - It's not just angry passengers who are suffering. The grounding of thousands of flights is disrupting cargo, mail and other crucial business for financially strapped airlines, and that means painful new strains on a U.S. economy teetering on the edge of recession.
Apologetic airlines suggest the cancellations won't extend beyond this weekend. But there are indications the problems may just be beginning as federal regulators step up their scrutiny of carriers' compliance with safety rules.
Air traffic systems, computers and other crucial equipment are aging, as are many of the planes themselves. Critics of the industry say that cutbacks on maintenance and inadequate government safeguards are starting to take a toll.
Meanwhile, record-high jet fuel prices have squeezed airlines and led to a new round of bankruptcies — most recently Frontier, ATA Airlines, Skybus and Aloha Airgroup — in an industry whose finances have always been shaky.
After the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, Congress authorized $5 billion in cash to help shore up the industry and followed up with $10 billion in loan guarantees. The industry now is suffering its hardest times since then.
Delays already were costing the economy an estimated $9 billion a year, according to Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., chairman of the Joint Economic Committee of Congress. "The U.S. economy can't afford to have one of its major airlines just shut down for days," he said Thursday. "The ripple effect is tremendous, it's like putting a vise on commerce."
American Airlines canceled more than 900 flights on Thursday and 570 for Friday because of wiring repairs. That brings to more than 3,000 the number of flights scrubbed since Tuesday when federal regulators warned that nearly half the airline’s planes might violate a safety regulation designed to prevent fires.
That, plus safety-inspection cancellations this month by Delta, Midwest and other airlines left hundreds of thousands of passengers scrambling for alternatives and drew outbursts from Capitol Hill.
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Nicholas Sabatini, associate FAA administrator for safety, said that, as disruptive as the cancellations might be, everybody should be grateful that "we're not here post-accident, but at a time when the system is incredibly safe."
"The airline industry is living on borrowed time," Rockerfeller said.
Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., said, "Some may argue it's one of the safest periods. But it's happened in spite of FAA policies. We've seen record flight delays, increases in near collisions on our runways, understaffing of controllers and safety inspectors." He also claimed lax enforcement by the regulatory agency, an allegation Sabatini denied.
Manufacturers rely on airlines to deliver tons of cargo a day, and any lengthy period of mass cancellations could prove costly. The groundings also are taking a financial toll on business travelers who lost a day or more of work, and on people in the airline industry such as flight crews idled by the groundings.
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