SFGate: More JetBlue Flights Canceled Monday

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Monday, February 19, 2007 (AP)
More JetBlue Flights Canceled Monday
By MARCUS FRANKLIN, Associated Press Writer


   (02-19) 05:37 PST NEW YORK, (AP) --

   Low cost fares, quirky blue potato chips and even a mea culpa from JetBl=
ue
Airways' founder may not be enough to ease passenger anxiety Monday as the
airline braces for another day of disrupted flights.

   The company said it would be canceling almost a quarter of the day's
flights but hopes to be fully operational on Tuesday, almost a week after
a Valentine's Day snowstorm created a meltdown for the airline.

   David G. Neeleman, the company's founder and chief executive, said he was
"humiliated and mortified" by the breakdown in the airline's operations.
He promised in an interview with The New York Times for its Monday
editions that in the future the company would pay penalties to customers
should they be stranded on a plane for too long.

   Neeleman blamed the crisis on poor communications and a failed reservati=
on
system. He said the ice storm had left many of the airline's 11,000 pilots
and flight attendants a great distance from where they could operate the
planes. He also said JetBlue lacked trained staff to coordinate the flight
crews. The reservation system had also been overwhelmed.

   The airline had scheduled 600 flights for Presidents Day, more than the
550 to 575 flights on a typical Monday. Of those, 139 flights have been
canceled, JetBlue announced late Saturday night.

   JetBlue Airways Corp. spokesman Sebastian White said headway was being
made on Sunday, but that the cancellations on Monday were needed to make
sure all flight crews had gotten the legally mandated amount of rest
before taking to the skies again.

   "Canceling one more day's operations will really help reset our airline,"
White said.

   All flights on JetBlue were canceled in and out of 11 airports: Richmond,
Va.; Pittsburgh; Charlotte and Raleigh/Durham, N.C.; Jacksonville, Fla.;
Austin and Houston in Texas; Columbus, Ohio; Nashville; Portland, Maine;
and Bermuda.

   White said the airline had tried to warn passengers through phone and
e-mail of flight cancellations over the past couple of days, and was in
the process of doing so for Monday's flights. JetBlue has been trying to
reduce the backlog of passengers through a number of methods including
flying charter flights, adding flights in certain sectors, rebooking
passengers who had some travel flexibility to later dates, and booking
seats on other airlines, White said.

   The cancellations followed hundreds of other canceled and delayed flights
since Wednesday, when a snow and ice storm grounded jets at John F.
Kennedy International Airport through the weekend.

   Passengers scrambled to deal with the disruption of their plans.

   "Oh my God, horrendous," Maria Arbelo, a teacher from New Haven, Conn.,
said of her experience. "It's been a terrible ordeal, I tell you. We've
been from line to line."

   Arbelo and two companions had been ticketed for a JetBlue flight to
Houston on Saturday morning to begin a Caribbean cruise. That flight was
canceled, as were all flights to Houston on Sunday. The airline put the
three women up in a hotel for the night, and placed them on a Sunday
evening flight to Cancun. From there, they would have to find a driver to
take them on a four-hour trip to meet their ship.

   Arbelo said JetBlue staffers had been nice, but seemed confused about wh=
at
to tell passengers. "I laugh about it because there's nothing we can do,"
the teacher said, resigned to losing two days of her vacation.

   Baggage handlers also struggled with the mountain of luggage returned to
the terminals because of the cancelations. Some passengers complained that
they couldn't leave the airport, even after their flights were canceled,
because no one could find their bags.

   White said the airline had teams out in New York City and Long Island on
Sunday delivering luggage to customers.

   JetBlue's service hot lines became overwhelmed by people trying to rebook
flights.

   Affected customers may receive refunds or rebook their flights, the
airline said.

   The airline said it initially tried to get its system back to normal by
selectively canceling flights Thursday and Friday, but long delays
continued as a result of constraints that included a one-runway operation
at JFK on Thursday, and flight crews burning through the number of hours
they are legally allowed to work before taking a rest.

   Prior to the current crises, JetBlue was overwhelmingly popular, offering
affordable fares, in-flight snacks of blue potato chips and DIRECTV. ------=
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Copyright 2007 AP

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