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Brits told to brace for summer of airport chaos as airlines struggle with low staff numbers

Brits told to brace for summer of airport chaos as airlines struggle with low staff numbers 2

Brits have been told to brace for a summer of airport chaos as airlines struggle with low staff numbers – while emergency plans are drawn up to avoid massive passport queues for the Easter getaway.  

Ministers have been accused of overseeing ‘cripplingly slow’ security checks for new airline staff, with British Airways having to cancel 64 domestic and European flights from Heathrow on Monday alone.

The increase in demand has come as airlines have been hit with staffing shortages, though, with operators citing difficulties in finding recruits, security red tape and Covid absences, The Times reports.   

It comes as border guards are also now gearing up for ‘significant problems’ as millions of holidaymakers head abroad, with fears passport queues could last hours as emergency plans are drawn up for the Easter weekend.  

Good Friday is set to be the busiest day of Easter with 2,430 flights leaving the UK. Flight data specialists Cirium show 9,212 will depart over the bank holiday weekend, 78 per cent of the total in pre-pandemic 2019.

But airlines are concerned that failure to address the current issues will lead to travel chaos extending into the summer, with some families having already endured three-hour queues to get through security at some UK airports.

One industry figure told The Times: ‘The process is cripplingly slow, Aviation was one of the hardest-hit sectors during the pandemic, suffered from a lack of targeted support, and is now facing a summer disrupted by the government being slow in vetting staff.’

Officials have accused ministers of failing to provide adequate resources to meet the increased demand as tens of thousands of potential employees await security clearance – including 12,000 at Heathrow alone.     

Pictured: Passengers queue at a very busy Heathrow Terminal 2 today as people head on Easter getaways

Pictured: Passengers queue at a very busy Heathrow Terminal 2 today as people head on Easter getaways 

Vetting procedures normally take between 14 and 15 weeks, but it is understood to now be taking up to six months to screen new staff.

Lucy Moreton of the Immigration Service Union said backroom staff were being offered bonuses to man desks at Heathrow.

The volunteers, who usually carry out checks on prohibited items, will be pushed to the front lines at airports and ports to prevent chaos. Miss Moreton said border forces were already stretched due to virus absences and the Channel migrant crisis.

‘There’s the potential for significant problems at the tail-end of this week and at the weekend and planning has already started,’ she added. 

‘We’re bringing staff down from Scotland and Northern Ireland to Heathrow.

‘They get expenses and overtime and they’re being offered a cash bonus for each shift they cover at Heathrow. 

‘Some passengers will sail through, but others could be looking at several hours in a queue. It won’t be chaos universally but there will be patches.’

Pictured: A long queue for check-in at Birmingham Airport today

Pictured: A long queue for check-in at Birmingham Airport today

Pictured: People wait for their baggage at Gatwick today as airports remain busy

Pictured: People wait for their baggage at Gatwick today as airports remain busy 

In other developments: 

  • Travel chiefs warned of summer disruption because of delays processing background checks on new airport and airline staff; 
  • On a tenth day of protests, Priti Patel led condemnation of eco-activists causing fuel shortages for drivers;
  • The protesters are feared to be planning to bring parts of London to a standstill over the weekend; 
  • The trade union representing thousands of rail workers warned ministers it was ready to strike;
  • Campaigners urged Network Rail to rethink plans to upgrade infrastructure over Easter.    
Some travel firms cut huge numbers of workers in the pandemic and are racing to find staff to cope with soaring demand. Pictured: Manchester Airport on April 8

Some travel firms cut huge numbers of workers in the pandemic and are racing to find staff to cope with soaring demand. Pictured: Manchester Airport on April 8

Pictured: Travellers wait at Manchester Airport on April 8 as airports remain packed with eager holidaymakers

Pictured: Travellers wait at Manchester Airport on April 8 as airports remain packed with eager holidaymakers 

Some travel firms cut huge numbers of workers in the pandemic and are racing to find staff to cope with soaring demand. But the drive is being hampered by delays in carrying out security and counter-terror checks.  

Martin Chalk, chief of the pilots’ union Balpa, said: ‘There will be problems into the summer. To be working in an airport you need an airside pass, which needs a criminal records and counter-terror check, which are taking months. The challenge won’t be answered quickly.’ 

A senior aviation source said: ‘It’s taking much longer to get the background checks done – two to three times as long – and it was already taking as long as 14 to 15 weeks.’ 

Pictured: Despite pleas from airport bosses to arrive three hours before flights, large queues are seen at the airport check-in at Manchester Airport on Saturday April 9

Pictured: Despite pleas from airport bosses to arrive three hours before flights, large queues are seen at the airport check-in at Manchester Airport on Saturday April 9

Travel operators are now at their busiest since the start of the pandemic. Nearly 4.2million passengers passed through Heathrow last month, only 35 per cent down on the 6.5million of March 2019. 

Good Friday is set to be the busiest day of Easter with 2,430 flights leaving the UK. Flight data specialists Cirium show 9,212 will depart over the bank holiday weekend, 78 per cent of the total in pre-pandemic 2019. 

Some passengers reported waiting up to 90 minutes to get through check-in and security at Manchester Airport yesterday. And dozens of families have vented their anger at BA over baggage problems. 

Passengers have been forced to leave airports without their belongings, in some cases waiting five days for them to be forwarded on. Pictured: Passengers are seen queueing at check-in on Saturday April 9 at Manchester Airport

Passengers have been forced to leave airports without their belongings, in some cases waiting five days for them to be forwarded on. Pictured: Passengers are seen queueing at check-in on Saturday April 9 at Manchester Airport 

Some passengers reported waiting up to 90 minutes to get through check-in and security at Manchester Airport yesterday. And dozens of families have vented their anger at BA over baggage problems. Pictured: Queues at Manchester Airport on Saturday April 9

Some passengers reported waiting up to 90 minutes to get through check-in and security at Manchester Airport yesterday. And dozens of families have vented their anger at BA over baggage problems. Pictured: Queues at Manchester Airport on Saturday April 9

Brits told to brace for summer of airport chaos as airlines struggle with low staff numbers 3

People share their flying experiences today online as travel chaos continues across the country

People share their flying experiences today online as travel chaos continues across the country

Passengers have been forced to leave airports without their belongings, in some cases waiting five days for them to be forwarded on.

Rory Boland of Which? Travel said: ‘Woefully understaffed airlines have booked far more flights than they can operate this Easter, with passengers of BA and EasyJet seeming to be the worst affected.’ 

A Home Office spokesman said: ‘We are working closely with all UK ports and airports to ensure passengers have the smoothest possible journey, and we will continue to deploy our staff flexibly.’ 

Pictured: Crowds of travellers at Heathrow Terminal 2 today as they prepare for holidays

Pictured: Crowds of travellers at Heathrow Terminal 2 today as they prepare for holidays 

Pictured: A busy Heathrow airport as people prepare to head off on Easter holidays

Pictured: A busy Heathrow airport as people prepare to head off on Easter holidays 

To add to travellers’ woes, the Transport Salaried Staffs’ Association yesterday put ministers on notice that it was ready to bring the railways to a halt with a national strike. 

The union, which represents ticket office and control room workers, wants guarantees that firms will not make any compulsory redundancies this year and salaries will match inflation.

Severe disruption on roads leading to cross-Channel services in Kent continued yesterday.

Severe disruption on roads leading to cross-Channel services in Kent continued yesterday. Pictured: Lorries queue on the M20 near Ashford in Kent on Saturday April 9

Severe disruption on roads leading to cross-Channel services in Kent continued yesterday. Pictured: Lorries queue on the M20 near Ashford in Kent on Saturday April 9

Why weren’t they ready for lift-off after lockdown?

 By Mark Palmer, Travel Editor for the Daily Mail

Were a business traveller to fly from overseas into Britain this week with a view to opening an office in the UK, he would likely take one look at the carnage and fly out again, concluding that the travel sector in Britain plc is not fit for purpose. And who could blame him?

It’s not as if the surge in demand for holidays over Easter has come as any great surprise. There’s been plenty of time to put contingency plans in place.

And what makes the debacle so infuriating is that for the past two years airlines and airports have banged on and on about wanting to see an end to costly testing and the filling out of passenger locator forms. Now, that day has come and they can’t cope.

It's not as if the surge in demand for holidays over Easter has come as any great surprise. There's been plenty of time to put contingency plans in place

It’s not as if the surge in demand for holidays over Easter has come as any great surprise. There’s been plenty of time to put contingency plans in place

It’s not short-sightedness but a case of being blind to a problem that was inevitable without incisive leadership and proper planning. Both have been sadly lacking.

Blaming the misery that holidaymakers have experienced in the last few days – and will continue to experience this week – on the rise in Covid infections is disingenuous.

Even before Christmas the World Travel & Tourism Council warned of severe staff shortages if the travel industry failed to hire and train up new staff to replace those who were let go at the height of the pandemic.

It didn’t happen, not least because the wages on offer have been at 2019 levels. Which is why children have been forced to urinate into plastic bags while queuing with their parents; why more than a thousand flights have been cancelled and why some people have waited more than three hours to retrieve their bags.

The blame game has already started, with airlines blaming the airports for their lack of preparation and airports blaming airlines for ratcheting up the number of flights in the hope of recouping their losses – and then cancelling them with little warning.

Blaming the misery that holidaymakers have experienced in the last few days ¿ and will continue to experience this week ¿ on the rise in Covid infections is disingenuous

Blaming the misery that holidaymakers have experienced in the last few days – and will continue to experience this week – on the rise in Covid infections is disingenuous

Now, confidence in travel is at risk and that’s dangerous. Travel in the UK accounts for nearly £150billion a year, more than 7.2 per cent of national output.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has been unusually silent in the last few days but he and his department need to make sure that the scenes we are witnessing never happen again.

Staying put over Easter seems an increasingly attractive option – because Good Friday looks set to be a rotten Friday for those keen to move about the country.

The West Coast main line will be closed between London Euston and Milton Keynes over the weekend for upgrades on the existing line and HS2 work, while Network Rail plans to carry out more than 530 engineering projects.

Drivers should also expect long queues on roads, with some 21.5million leisure trips expected to be made over the Easter holiday.

Expect a number of roadworks even though no one might be working on them.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has been unusually silent in the last few days but he and his department need to make sure that the scenes we are witnessing never happen again

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has been unusually silent in the last few days but he and his department need to make sure that the scenes we are witnessing never happen again

 

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