Travelers across the United States remained stranded at airports like Boston Logan International Airport on Tuesday amid thousands of flight cancelations by Southwest Airlines.
Passengers were lined up at the Southwest ticket counter Tuesday morning at Logan, as 39 cancelations and 21 delays impacted flights for the day. Most of those were for Southwest flights.
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There were 2,818 cancelations Tuesday across flights within, into or out of the United States, according to FlightAware. There were 592 domestic delays Tuesday as well.
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In total, there were 2,495 canceled flights Tuesday by Southwest, the website said.
The airline said the recent extreme weather impacted most of their flights and threw off their schedule. The company issued an apology to its passengers.
"We were fully staffed and prepared for the approaching holiday weekend when the severe weather swept across the continent, where Southwest is the largest carrier in 23 of the top 25 travel markets in the U.S," the airlines' statement read. "These operational conditions forced daily changes to our flight schedule at a volume and magnitude that still has the tools our teams use to recover the airline operating at capacity."
"This safety-first work is intentional, ongoing, and necessary to return to normal reliability, one that minimizes last-minute inconveniences," the statement continued. "As we continue the work to recover our operation, we have made the decision to continue operating a reduced schedule by flying roughly one third of our schedule for the next several days."
Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Transportation said the situation with Southwest has sparked concern by the agency, announcing it is closely looking into the "disproportionate and unacceptable rate of cancellations and delays" by the airline.
Democratic Sens. Ed Markey of Massachusetts and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut issued a joint statement Tuesday afternoon calling on Southwest to compensate passengers for the holiday cancellations.
“Southwest Airlines is failing consumers during the most important travel week of the year," they said. "Instead of a holiday spent celebrating with family and friends, passengers are sleeping in airports or desperately trying to reach customer service agents."
Mike O'Donohue of Boston was headed to Tampa Bay to watch Tom Brady and the Buccaneers take on the Carolina Panthers next weekend, but he booked his flight on Southwest.
"Our flight got canceled and there's just no possible way we can reschedule until I think Jan. 1, and that's when the game is," he said. "So I'm supposed to be in Florida getting a tan on my back and instead I'm going to be here."
He's not alone. Southwest has canceled up to two-thirds of its flights for the next few days.
Traveler Jessica White is now going to drive to Tennessee instead of waiting for her flight.
"We had heard that some had been canceled but we assumed that the weather had like cleared up," White said. "It was disappointing."
Meanwhile, Doris Burkey's daughter couldn't join her in Boston for Christmas after Southwest canceled her flight last week. Now, she can't make it back home to St. Louis.
"I thought that I was just going to come and get in line, check luggage and go," Burkey said. "And when I got up there after 45 minutes to an hour the guy told me, 'No, we don't have any flights and the first one is on the 31st.'"
Some travelers said they will be taking their business elsewhere after back to back cancelations.
"It's very unacceptable and very unprofessional by Southwest," Easton Berkamp said, who had his flight to Boston canceled, only to have a second one canceled on his way home to Dallas. "Other airlines are not having these issues. I think I'm not going to fly Southwest anymore to be quite honest."
"This is unspeakably frustrating -- especially around the holidays -- for passengers," airline business reporter David Slotnick said. "This is an awful situation."