United CEO Says Airlines Are Scheduling Flights They Can't Fulfill
JESSICA CORBETT for Common Dreams
(Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)Three unidentified U.S. airlines are under federal investigation
for potentially scheduling flights the companies know they ultimately will not
be able to fly—a revelation The New York Times reported Friday,
just two days after United Airlines' CEO suggested competitors are doing just
that.
The Times focused largely on how air travel
issues—including mass cancellations from
a winter storm during the holidays last month and a Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) system outage that
grounded air traffic across the country last week—have put Pete Buttigieg, the
head of the U.S. Department of Transporation (DOT), "in the hot
seat."
"Unfortunately, the Department of Transportation has been
hesitant to hold the airlines accountable," John Breyault, the vice
president for public policy at the National Consumers League (NCL), told the
newspaper. "While Secretary Buttigieg has talked a tough talk,
particularly over the past few months, we have yet to see that really translate
into action."
In an interview, Buttigieg defended his record—which has
included a proposed rule on refunds, an online dashboard of airlines'
commitments, and nearly $16 million in fines—saying that "in terms of what
we've done and in terms of what we're doing, I would stack up our work in this
area against anybody who’s taken this on at the federal level."
According to the report, "The department is also
investigating three U.S. airlines over whether they scheduled flights that they
did not have enough staff to support, a spokeswoman for the agency said, though
she declined to identify the airlines."
That reporting came after United CEO Scott Kirby said Wednesday
during an earnings call with investors that "there are a number of
airlines who cannot fly their schedules. The customers are paying the price.
They're canceling a lot of flights. But they simply can't fly the schedules
today."
"What happened over the holidays wasn't a one-time event
caused by the weather, and it wasn't just at one airline. One airline got the
bulk of the media coverage, but the weather was the straw that broke the
camel's back for several," Kirby said—presumably referring to Southwest
Airlines, which faced intense scrutiny for canceling nearly 17,000 flights
partly due to issues with its personnel management system that employees and
other critics claim could have
been avoided with technological upgrades.
United has recognized "the new reality and the new math for
all airlines," Kirby asserted, while warning that "our industry has
been changed profoundly by the pandemic and you can't run your airline like
it's 2019 or you will fail."
"We believe any airline that tries to run at the same
staffing levels that it had pre-pandemic is bound to fail and likely to tip
over to meltdown anytime there are weather or air traffic control stresses in
the system," the CEO said, highlighting the need for investments in not
only staff but also technology and infrastructure.
Kirby's comments about competitors' alleged scheduling practices
caught the attention of the anti-monopoly think tank American Economic
Liberties Project (AELP), which described them as
"the airlines' open admission of fraud."
"What an extraordinary admission," William McGee,
senior fellow for aviation and travel at AELP and author of the airline
industry exposé Attention All Passengers, tweeted Thursday.
For months, the AELP has asked the DOT "to investigate IF airlines were accepting bookings (and $!) for flights they couldn't operate," he said. "Now United's CEO confirmed it. Imagine any other industry taking money for products it can't deliver."
"Ironically, we're learning more about canceled flights
from the airlines than we are from the Department of Transportation,"
McGee toldThe Lever,
while also pointing out that the DOT's "complaint database showed that
United was by far the worst offender on unpaid refunds dating back to the
earliest days of Covid in 2020."
As The Lever reported Friday:
Complaints against the major U.S. airlines, including
United, more than tripled in
the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, as companies routinely sold tickets
for flights they could not adequately staff, canceled the flights at the last
minute, and slow-walked or withheld refunds while collecting billions in
taxpayer bailout dollars.
The behavior prompted 34 attorneys general to write to Buttigieg
on December 16 asking his agency to "require airlines to advertise and
sell only flights that they have adequate personnel to fly and support, and
perform regular audits of airlines to ensure compliance and impose fines on
airlines that do not comply."
The letter, submitted as part of the rulemaking process for a still-delayed
consumer protection proposal at Buttigieg's agency, also noted that the
proposed rule "includes no provision that would correct this practice and
that would prevent airlines from advertising and selling tickets for flights
that they cannot reasonably provide."
In an opinion piece published by
the Times last week in the wake of the FAA outage, the AELP's
McGee traced U.S. air
travel troubles back much further than the ongoing pandemic, explaining that
although "the airlines were initially regulated in the 1930s for many
reasons, some of which should be familiar to us in 2023," Congress passed
the Airline Deregulation Act (ADA) in 1978.
"One could envision a wholesale return to the pre-1978 era,
with route-setting and price-setting brought back into public hands
entirely," he wrote, noting that the AELP "has proposed more FAA
funding and eliminating federal preemption,
which would allow consumers and state officials to sue airlines over consumer
and safety rules."
"My colleagues and I are, however, eager to take part in a
national conversation about regulating the industry more comprehensively,"
McGee added. "We haven't had a national discussion for 44 years about the
state of air travel. It's time to have that discussion, rather than playing
whack-a-mole with each crisis as it arises."
Buttigieg "has taken a tougher line than most of his
predecessors" at the DOT, the NCL's Breyault tweeted Friday,
while sharing his critical remarks to the Times. "But he is
hamstrung by the ADA, which gives airlines far too much power. To truly protect
passengers, Congress needs to act."