Flight Cancellation Conundrum

Why should a flight ever be canceled at the end of the day in an airline hub? After spending a wonderful Friday night in Dulles airport because my flight was canceled for “mechanical reasons,” I started wondering why an airline would do this? Follow my logic here:

  • Dulles is a hub for United (yeah, it was them…)
  • At the end of the day, most hubs have a small fleet of airplanes tied up at the gate. Dulles was no exception.
  • I was scheduled to fly on an Embraer of some sort, and there were several very similar looking Embraers available (whether they were actually similar is another question)

Ok, so my flight had some kind of mechanical trouble (they never tell you what). Now during the day, all the planes are in flight. There’s never a “backup plane” they can just magically pull out of thin air. But at night, all the planes are offline. Why wouldn’t they just take another one and spend the rest of the night fixing the first one for use the next morning?

After witnessing the fiasco that followed, the costs to the airline to actually cancel a flight for mechanical reasons are enormous. Unlike weather cancellations, they actually have to pay for a hotel room, transportation, and food for the displaced passengers. They also have to pay the gate agents overtime to hang around and reschedule everyone’s flights. When this happens at 1:00 AM and the line doesn’t finish until about 3:30 AM, there’s also the issue of irate passengers (the 80 year old man in another line was really feisty) and lost goodwill. Oh, and they also have a plane out of place for the following morning, meaning that they either have to fix the original one and deadhead it later, or else they cancel yet another flight the next day.

I honestly have no answer for this. Maybe there are enormous costs to switch planes? Maybe they aren’t that similar and the flight crew wasn’t rated on any of the other Embraers? Maybe “mechanical reasons” was a convenient cover for something else? Anyone have any ideas for this?

Thoughts from the Airport

I’m sitting in SAT right now, and now is the perfect time to make random observations about airports:

  • Southwest airlines has started lining up people by letter and number. Organizing customers by more than just groups makes sense in their ruthless drive for efficiency. Loading customers onto the airplane is very much a delicate science, but many of the approaches are quite fascinating.
  • SAT now features dozens of power stations spread throughout the airport. You can sit down, plug in your laptop and recharge right away.
  • My work issued Blackberry does Bluetooth dial-up networking. That means that all I need to do is have it somewhere near my laptop, and I can dial up an Internet connection. I actually think the Blackberry is a rather middling cell phone (the iPhone leaves it in the dust in almost every way but messaging), but this feature is killer.
  • Is there a great conspiracy that only a certain variety of restaurants are allowed in airports? It’s an American truth: McDonald’s, Blimpies, Sbarro, and maybe some little local place. Are these the only restaurants operationally capable of sustaining an airport business?

photo-1.jpgAnd now my late flight has arrived and is disgorging its passengers. Time to go find my place among the numbered pillars.