“We appreciate the frustration this causes, especially as customers are travelling for Christmas, and sincerely apologise for the impact these changes are having on travel plans.
“We are working to minimise any delays and re-accommodating passengers on flights as close as possible to their original departure times across both Jetstar and Qantas services.”
Jetstar customers faced an average four-hour recovery time before they were put on another flight, said a person with knowledge of the situation who did not want to be identified.
Virgin Australia said its customers had also been impacted by a number of scheduling changes, many of which had been made before Christmas Eve.
There was only one unplanned Virgin flight cancellation on Friday.
“We apologise to any guest impacted by changes to our schedule and we are ensuring all guests make it to their final destination today,” a Virgin spokesperson said.
“All impacted guests were contacted prior to travel and automatically moved onto alternative services that are departing as close to the original departure time as possible.
“Guests are encouraged to visit the Virgin Australia website to check the status of their flight prior to travel.
“Virgin Australia is operating hundreds of services today with little to no impact on scheduled departure or arrival times.”
Blaize Tilley caught up in Christmas Eve flight delays at Melbourne Airport. Credit:Nine News
All Virgin guests were moved onto an alternative same-day service, arriving on Friday afternoon.
Blaize Tilley said he was headed to Coffs Harbour direct from Melbourne and was now looking at a flight through Sydney.
But first he faced a wait for airline staff to find his booking, which had gone missing in the system.
“If not, it’s not going to be good. I’m going to NSW to see my mum, I haven’t seen her for a couple of years because of lockdown restriction, so I’m hoping to see her this year,” he told Nine News.
Meanwhile, holidaymakers hoping to make it into Brisbane faced similar issues after dozens of flights were cancelled. An airport spokeswoman said about 45 flights in and out of Brisbane had been cancelled out of 400 flights on Friday.
Amber Tiloy got a message from Virgin at midday on Thursday saying her Friday flight from Melbourne to Sunshine Coast had been cancelled due to crew limitations.
She said she later received an email from the airline informing her the flight would go ahead but it had been rescheduled to 11.40am on Christmas Eve, earlier than her initial arrival time.
With the results of her PCR test taken on Wednesday yet to be processed, Ms Tiloy worried the earlier departure would mean she wouldn’t meet the requirements to cross the border into Queensland.
All arrivals to the state from high-risk locations such as Sydney and Melbourne are required to provide proof of a negative PCR test result taken 72 hours before departure.
Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said this week she would consider moving away from PCR tests to requiring only rapid tests to enter the state after January 1, but for people like Ms Tiloy the change comes too late.
“At the moment I’m a bit annoyed because it’s a lot sooner than we had planned. For people to pick us up and things like that isn’t such a big deal but the test result is not there,” she said.
“I tried calling [the testing clinic], emailing. They don’t pick up, there’s no response. Same with Virgin actually so I don’t know what to do.”
There were more than 1600 flights cancelled globally on Christmas Eve as a result of the spike in Omicron cases, according to the website Flight Aware.
In the United States, where nearly 170,000 people are testing COVID-positive every day, United Airlines cancelled at least 150 flights scheduled to depart dozens of airports on Friday, along with 44 others that were supposed to take off on Saturday.
Other American airlines, including Delta, JetBlue and Allegiant, followed suit.
With New York Times
Airlines move to ease fears over Christmas Day travel after mass cancellations
Source: Philippines Alive