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Spirit Airlines cancellations are poised to enter FIFTH straight day after budget airline canned 449 of its flights - more than half - on Thursday

 Beleaguered budget airline Spirit is poised to enter its fifth day of mass cancelations Friday after axing more than half of its flights Thursday. 

The airline cancelled 449 or 56 percent of its scheduled flights Thursday and has already cancelled 179 or 23 percent of its total flights for Friday, according to Flight Aware.

Overall the airline has cancelled more than 1,700 flights since Sunday, as the airline struggles to overcome what its CEO said has been a problem that had been building for some time. 

Spirit Airlines' woes continued into their fifth straight day Friday, as the airline was forced to cut more than half of its flight on Thursday, with more cancelations incoming. Customers were seen Thursday waiting on line at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston

Spirit Airlines' woes continued into their fifth straight day Friday, as the airline was forced to cut more than half of its flight on Thursday, with more cancelations incoming. Customers were seen Thursday waiting on line at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston 

In a call with reporters Thursday night Spirit CEO Ted Christie said that a combination of factors, including staffing shortages and bad weather had led to chronic delays throughout July, which had in turn led to crews timing out, or reaching the maximum amount of time they could legally work per day. 

Spirit CEO Ted Christie said Thursday evening that the mass cancellations had been brewing throughout July, as a combination of staff shortages

Spirit CEO Ted Christie said Thursday evening that the mass cancellations had been brewing throughout July, as a combination of staff shortages

'We couldn't get in front of it,' he said, according to CNBC, and he estimated the cancellations likely affected tens of thousands of Spirit customers.  

He said it was too early to tell how it might affect the company financially  

'When we reach this level of disruption, being able to recover does require a lot of resources, we're not built to deal with this level of disruption and I think there's some learning in there about how we might create more variability in staffing so that a we can deal with it,' he said in an interview with ABC.  

'When we started canceling our crew got dislocated throughout the system. They were in the wrong places at the wrong time. And we needed to start to build that puzzle back together again. And unfortunately that takes our group a lot of time to do.'

Christi said the solution the airline saw was to make deeper and deeper cuts to its scheduled flights.

Customers have been taking to social media throughout the week to voice their displeasure and share their Spirit horror stories

Customers have been taking to social media throughout the week to voice their displeasure and share their Spirit horror stories

The good new is that's now finally starting to bear some fruit. We are starting to turn the tide here and get our operation back moving again, there will still be cancellations over the next few days, but we can start to build back to the full operation,' he said. 

That might be cold comfort for the thousands of passengers who have had their travel plans delayed or outright ruined as a result of the mass cancellations.

Customers took to social media to express their displeasure at the disruptions. 

One said his flight along with those of the members of his youth ultimate frisbee team headed to a national tournament in Minnesota was canceled Friday.

'There's something ironic that we won't be taking Spirit to an Ultimate tournament,' he said. 

Spirit planes at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston Thursday. The airlines CEO said he believes tens of thousands of customers have been affected by the cancellations

Spirit planes at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston Thursday. The airlines CEO said he believes tens of thousands of customers have been affected by the cancellations

Customers of a cancelled Spirit flight Tuesday morning were force to sleep at LAX Airport. The mass cancellations have been occurring since Sunday

Customers of a cancelled Spirit flight Tuesday morning were force to sleep at LAX Airport. The mass cancellations have been occurring since Sunday

Another wrote: 'My 2nd Spirit Airlines flight of the week was just cancelled.. a rebook from Tues cancellation.. you guys gonna pay for my new flight I’m booking with SW? Only way to make this right'

 Another reported on Wednesday that her flight out of Sacramento to Vegas was still on schedule, but as of early Thursday morning her flight had been canceled.

Another tweeted that they needed to borrow $700 to purchase a ticket last minute because the airline had failed to let them know of their cancellation in time. 

Others were just simply angry. 'F**k @SpiritAirlines for canceling our flight hours before we had to be at the airport,' tweeted another. 

Other horror stories include those of seven months-pregnant Robin Wilson, who on Wednesday was left to fend for herself. 

Robin Wilson (pictured), who booked a direct flight from Cleveland to Atlanta for Tuesday, is now stuck in Los Angeles until Thursday. She is seven months pregnant

Robin Wilson (pictured), who booked a direct flight from Cleveland to Atlanta for Tuesday, is now stuck in Los Angeles until Thursday. She is seven months pregnant

Wilson's intended flight from Cleveland to Atlanta was rerouted to LA. She was told by Spirit that she'd have to wait four days for the next flight, but Wilson did not have the funds to book a hotel to stay in. 

She faced spending four days 'living' in the terminal of Los Angeles International Airport, and was only put up in a hotel when FOX 11 reported her story, and shamed Spirit into providing the 'high risk' passenger with accommodation. 

'I definitely don't have a flight out from LAX to Cleveland until Thursday. [I have] no accommodations at all…I'm seven months pregnant, I'm high-risk,' Wilson told the network before her issue was resolved. 

The Deleon family says their Puerto Rican vacation got extended from eight days to ten
While they were able to get rebooked on another flight home, the family did have to spend over $800 in additional expenses and accommodations

The Deleon family says their Puerto Rican vacation got extended from eight days to ten. While they were able to get rebooked on another flight home, the family did have to spend over $800 in additional expenses and accommodations

Brenda Deleon told DailyMail.com how her family's eight day vacation to Puerto Rico had to be extended by two days - at a cost of $1,000 - because of Spirit. 

After receiving notification of a cancellation late Tuesday night, Deleon tried to contact Spirit customer service but wasn't able to speak with someone.

 'I called last night and was on hold for 42 minutes, but figured they were closed. This morning I went to the airport to talk to someone but the Spirit kiosk was empty,' she said. 

Deleon called the airlines 1-800 again on Wednesday and was able to rebooked their family's flights for Friday at 2.50am. But, they still faced issues with accommodations.

'Our AirBnb was booked tonight so we looked for another home for $478.41 and two days of  car rental for $342.34,' she said. 

'[Spirit said] they will refund only half of what trip costs which is not an option since prices with other airlines skyrocketed. We have to wait it out.'

1 comment:

  1. well ??? What did you expect a straight or good deal from crooks???
    Spirit Airlines has been the subject of complaints, and to punitive actions by the United States Department of Transportation (DOT). Most of the claims against the company were for allegations of deceptive advertising practices, customer service, and the airline's policies for charging additional fees at the time of purchase:

    In November 2011, the DOT fined Spirit $43,900 for alleged deceptive advertising practices. The complaint claimed that the airline had been running an advertising campaign which promoted specific discounted fares on billboards, posters, and Twitter, but did not disclose full details regarding extra fees added onto the advertised rates.[51][52]
    In January 2012, the DOT fined Spirit $100,000 for mishandling of complaints related to its treatment of customers with disabilities.[53][54]
    In 2013, and again in 2015, the DOT received more passenger complaints about Spirit than any other airline; the rate of complaints was "dramatically higher" than the overall rate for the industry.[55][56]
    On April 5, 2021, a Spirit Airlines flight attendant confronted a family on-board a plane scheduled to fly from Orlando to New York because their 2-year-old child was not wearing a mask.[57]
    In August 2021, Spirit Airlines cancelled flights across the country leaving travelers stranded. Spirit Airlines said "We’re working around the clock to get back on track in the wake of some travel disruptions over the weekend due to a series of weather and operational challenges. We needed to make proactive cancellations to some flights across the network, but the majority of flights are still scheduled as planned."[58]

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