With the White House’s surprise decision to bar foreign nationals from Europe from entering the United States, the already battered airline industry is facing yet another challenge. Unsurprisingly, we are now seeing even more cancellation across the industry as even U.S. citizen and legal permanent residents can now only enter the United States through 11 CDC-approved airports.
The approved airports are Atlanta (ATL), Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW), Detroit (DTW), Newark (EWR), Honolulu (HNL), New York-JFK (JFK), Los Angeles (LAX), Chicago-O’Hare (ORD), Seattle (SEA), San Francisco (SFO) and Washington-Dulles (IAD). All of these are major hub airports that also currently certified to handle flights from China, but in recent years, a lot of airlines added direct international flights from smaller fields as well.
As Delta announced today, it’ll temporarily cancel flights between cities like Amsterdam and Orlando, Portland and Salt Lake City, for example, as well as flights to Paris from Cincinnati, Raleigh/Durham and Indianapolis. These flights will still operate from the U.S. on Thursday and then return one last time on Friday.
American Airlines tells me it is still working through this “evolving situation,” but it’ll surely be forced to make similar cuts as it also operates European flights to airports that are not on the CDC’s list. Lufthansa and others are also in the process of canceling their flight schedules to smaller airports. Even before this announcement, Lufthansa alone canceled 23,000 flights.
You can find all of our coverage of Covid-19 here.
Written by Frederic Lardinois
This news first appeared on https://techcrunch.com/2020/03/12/airlines-start-cancelling-more-flights-from-europe-as-new-restrictions-go-into-effect/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Techcrunch+%28TechCrunch%29 under the title “Airlines start cancelling more flights from Europe, as new restrictions go into effect”. Bolchha Nepal is not responsible or affiliated towards the opinion expressed in this news article.