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Delayed Flights Cost Passengers More Than Lost Time

Not Even DOT Secretary Peters Is Immune

Airline delays can be frustrating for leisure travelers, even heartbreaking if they cause you to miss a wedding or funeral. But if you're traveling for business, delayed and cancelled flights cost you money... and the resulting cost to the nation's economy is coming under scrutiny in this election year.

In her speech to the Washington Aero Club last Tuesday, US Transportation Secretary Mary Peters noted even when flights are on time, the need to plan for delays is, itself, detrimental to productivity. She shared an anecdote that would be familiar to many frequent business fliers.

Peters told attendees she took a 7:00 am flight recently from Washington, DC to New York to attend a 10:00 am meeting with Mayor Michael Bloomberg. She said she took the early flight, because she couldn't risk a later one being delayed. In this instance, her flight arrived on time, which left the nation's top transportation official to wander around Gracie Mansion for an hour before her appointment with the mayor.

Of her experience, Peters commented, "It was absolutely not an efficient use of our time. There were lots of other things I could and should have been doing."

The US Department of Transportation's Bureau of Transportation Statistics compiles airline delay data, but admits that official data most likely underestimate the actual costs to the nation's economy. In the first 11 months of 2007, for example, 1.6 million passenger flights were delayed by 15 minutes or more, totalling 170 passenger-years, up from 98 years lost in 2003. The average delay has grown over that same period from 49 to 56 minutes.

The DOT pegs the monetary costs of those delays at $15 billion, but many related costs of the delays cannot be calculated. Among those other factors are time lost by fliers stranded for hours at airports after delays force them to miss connections. Official figures also do not account for required early arrivals at airports, waits in security lines and baggage claim areas, and the subtle effect of airlines intentionally sandbagging published flight durations to allow reporting on-time arrivals.

Peters noted in an interview with the Washington Post, "It is incredible. It means a loss to our economy, a loss to our productivity; it also means a loss in quality of life."

So... why do US travelers put up with the increasing delays and declining quality? Apparently, for the same reason we keep buying expensive gasoline -- there's no better alternative.

For most business travelers, even delayed airlines are more efficient than other modes of travel. Even at the airports with the worst cumulative time wasted for travelers, traffic remains strong.

DOT statistics show total passenger days lost to airline delays, just in the first 11 months of 2007, at 3,475 for Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International, 4,619 at Chicago O'Hare, and 4,897 days total at the three Washington, DC-area airports.

Recent changes to improve the flow through New York-area airports could be significant. Using the Washington, DC area as an example, the 10 worst flights in terms of delays from that market all link through New York metro airports, according to DOT data.

FMI: www.bts.gov, www.dot.gov

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