Tag Archives: accountable

Massachusetts Supreme Court Upholding State’s Fiduciary Duty Rule and Holding Robinhood Accountable is a Huge Victory for Main Street Investors – Better Markets

  1. Massachusetts Supreme Court Upholding State’s Fiduciary Duty Rule and Holding Robinhood Accountable is a Huge Victory for Main Street Investors Better Markets
  2. Massachusetts court rejects Robinhood’s challenge to state investment advice rule Reuters
  3. Live news: Massachusetts wins case against Robinhood as regulators try to ban broker Financial Times
  4. Massachusetts Court Overturns Robinhood Win Wealth Management
  5. Massachusetts’ highest court hands a win to state-level securities regulation in Robinhood case Boston Herald
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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GOPers demand Biden impeachment after Hunter’s ex-biz partner reveals alleged calls: ‘Must be held accountable’ – New York Post

  1. GOPers demand Biden impeachment after Hunter’s ex-biz partner reveals alleged calls: ‘Must be held accountable’ New York Post
  2. Photos show Hunter Biden in dad’s Corvette at Delaware home on same day as ‘shakedown’ message Fox News
  3. Stuart Varney: Hunter’s ex-biz partner’s testimony will put Biden’s ‘denials in a whole new light’ Fox Business
  4. Devon Archer’s testimony proves it: Hunter’s a grifter — and Joe’s a damn liar New York Post
  5. Hunter Biden’s friend to tell Congress then-VP Joe joined dozens of son’s business meetings via phone: report Fox News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Christopher Nolan Warns of ‘Terrifying Possibilities’ as AI Reaches ‘Oppenheimer Moment’: ‘We Have to Hold People Accountable’ – Variety

  1. Christopher Nolan Warns of ‘Terrifying Possibilities’ as AI Reaches ‘Oppenheimer Moment’: ‘We Have to Hold People Accountable’ Variety
  2. Christopher Nolan’s daughter face melts off in ‘Oppenheimer’ cameo Insider
  3. How Much Oppenheimer Cost To Make & What Box Office It Needs Screen Rant
  4. Christopher Nolan reacts to fans who assumed he detonated an atomic bomb on the set of ‘Oppenheimer’ Yahoo Entertainment
  5. ‘Oppenheimer’ First Reactions: Cillian Murphy Is ‘Mesmerizing’ – IndieWire IndieWire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jordan Neely news: AOC, BLM call for ex-Marine to be ‘held accountable’ for NYC subway chokehold death – The Independent

  1. Jordan Neely news: AOC, BLM call for ex-Marine to be ‘held accountable’ for NYC subway chokehold death The Independent
  2. Medical examiner rules NYC subway chokehold death a homicide ABC7
  3. Activists want charges brought against Marine in subway chokehold incident CBS New York
  4. Death on the F: Homicide of Jordan Neely on the subway demands fair probe by Manhattan DA and shows many failures of mental health care New York Daily News
  5. No One Cared About Jordan Neely’s Life. They Just Want to Use His Death | Opinion Newsweek
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Local prosecutor weighs in on who’s accountable in his office as Gardner assigns blame to her employees – KMOV4

  1. Local prosecutor weighs in on who’s accountable in his office as Gardner assigns blame to her employees KMOV4
  2. Embattled Soros-backed prosecutor, facing Missouri AG effort to oust her, now gets 2024 challenger Fox News
  3. Missouri AG’s office tries to get murder cases reinstated for Kim Gardner’s office St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  4. Gardner claims AG Bailey hasn’t provided lawful basis to remove her in formal response KMOV St. Louis
  5. Kim Gardner stands ground, calls effort to remove her from office ‘frivolous’ KTVI Fox 2 St. Louis
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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As Southwest flight cancellations continue, Buttigieg vows to hold airline accountable

(CNN) — Relief is still a few days away for passengers booked with Southwest Airlines this week, as the beleaguered airline continues to grapple with what US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has referred to as a complete meltdown of the system.

Out of the 2,798 cancellations already made for Wednesday flights within, into or out of the United States as of 11:30 a.m. ET, some 2,508 of them are operated by Southwest, according to flight tracking website FlightAware.

In all, Southwest has canceled about 15,700 flights since winter weather began disrupting air travel on December 22. That figure includes more than 2,300 flights already canceled for Thursday.

Other US airlines have since recovered from the storm disruptions.

In fact, American Airlines and United Airlines have capped prices on some routes served by Southwest Airlines to make their flights more accessible to stranded passengers.

Southwest does not have interline agreements with other carriers that would allow its agents to rebook passengers on a different airline, leaving travelers in charge of exploring other options.

Denver International Airport is leading the way Wednesday in the number of cancellations, with significant cancellations at Chicago Midway, Baltimore-Washington, Nashville International and Dallas Love Field airports, among others.

Southwest plans to fly a reduced schedule over the next few days to reposition crew and planes, airline CEO Bob Jordan said in a video released by the airline late Tuesday. “We’re optimistic to be back on track before next week,” Jordan said.

Buttigieg says he spoke directly to Jordan on Tuesday about the thousands of flights that have been canceled this week.

“Their system really has completely melted down,” Buttigieg told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Tuesday.

“I made clear that our department will be holding them accountable for their responsibilities to customers, both to get them through this situation and to make sure that this can’t happen again.”

Those responsibilities include providing meal vouchers and hotel accommodations for passengers whose flights were disrupted “as a result of Southwest’s decisions and actions,” a Department of Transportation spokesperson said Tuesday.

US airlines are also required to provide cash refunds to passengers whose flights were canceled and opted not to travel, the DOT said.

Tuesday at a glance

CNN’s Carlos Suarez reports from Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport, where travelers are braving long lines and flight cancellations after a massive winter storm swept through the US.

More than 3,200 flights within, into or out of the United States were canceled on Tuesday, according to FlightAware.

Of those canceled flights, some 2,694 were those of Southwest — a stunning 84% of all canceled flights in the United States.

Long lines of travelers attempting to rebook or make connections were witnessed at Southwest ticket counters at multiple US airports on Tuesday, while huge piles of unclaimed bags continued to grow as passengers struggled to reclaim their luggage in airports including Chicago’s Midway International, Harry Reid in Las Vegas and William P. Hobby Airport in Houston

Passenger Trisha Jones told CNN at the airport in Atlanta that she and her partner had been traveling for five days, trying to get home to Wichita, Kansas, after disembarking from a cruise at Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

After her flight out was canceled, she stayed with relatives, then rerouted to Atlanta to pick up a connecting flight.

“We were fortunate, because we were in Fort Lauderdale — my family lives in the Tampa bay area so we were able to rent a car to go see my family for Christmas,” Jones said. “We’ve seen a lot of families who are sleeping on the floor, and it just breaks my heart.”

Buttigieg: ‘A lot of cleaning up to do’

Hundreds of bags remain unclaimed at Baltimore Washington International Airport (BWI) on December 28.

Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Southwest has blamed the travel disaster on several factors, including winter storm delays, aggressive flight scheduling and outdated infrastructure.

“From what I can tell, Southwest is unable to locate even where their own crews are, let alone their own passengers, let alone baggage,” said Buttigieg, adding that he also spoke with leaders of the airline’s unions representing flight attendants and pilots.

The secretary said he told CEO Jordan that he expects Southwest to proactively offer refunds and expense reimbursement to affected passengers without them having to ask.

“I conveyed to the CEO our expectation that they are going to go above and beyond to take care of passengers and to address this,” he said.

Buttigieg told CNN the Department of Transportation is prepared to pursue fines against Southwest if there is evidence that the company has failed to meet its legal obligations, but he added that the department will be taking a closer look at consistent customer service problems at the airline.

“While all of the other parts of the aviation system have been moving toward recovery and getting better each day, it’s actually been moving the opposite direction with this airline,” said Buttigieg.

“You’ve got a company here that’s got a lot of cleaning up to do,” he said.

Southwest CEO issues video apology

Jordan apologized to passengers and employees in the video released on Tuesday evening.

“We’re doing everything we can to return to a normal operation, and please also hear that I am truly sorry,” Jordan said.

He said with large numbers of airplanes and flight crews “out of position” in dozens of cities, the airline decided to “significantly reduce our flying to catch up.”

While Jordan acknowledged problems with the company response, the statement suggested that he did not foresee massive changes to Southwest’s operating plans in response to the mass cancellations.

“The tools we use to recover from disruption serve us well 99% of the time, but clearly we need to double-down on our already-existing plans to upgrade systems for these extreme circumstances so that we never again face what’s happening right now,” said Jordan.

Is there anything passengers can do?

Katy Nastro, spokesperson for Scott’s Cheap Flights, shares her tips on what to do if your flight is delayed or canceled.

Southwest has warned that this week’s cancellations and delays are expected to continue for several more days.

So what should customers do?

“First things first, travelers who are still stuck waiting on Southwest and need to get somewhere should try to book a flight with another airline as soon as possible … right now, really,” said Kyle Potter, executive editor at the travel advice website Thrifty Traveler, in an email to CNN Travel late Tuesday afternoon.

“Every airline in the country is jam-packed right now, so your odds of even finding a seat — let alone at an even halfway decent price — get smaller by the hour,” Potter said.

“Travelers in the thick of this should be sure to save all their receipts: other flights, a rental car, nights at the hotel, meals, anything,” Potter said.

If you’ve been left in the lurch and your efforts to reach a customer service agent are going nowhere, the founder of Scott’s Cheap Flights suggests trying an international number.

“The main hotline for US airlines will be clogged with other passengers getting rebooked. To get through to an agent quickly, call any one of the airline’s dozens of international offices,” Scott Keyes said. Those agents can handle US-based reservations, Keyes said.

Click here to get international numbers that Southwest has previously posted.

Southwest: ‘Keep your receipts’

After their flight was canceled, 13 strangers decided to rent a van and drive all the way from Orlando to Knoxville, Tennessee.

Southwest spokesperson Jay McVay said in a news conference at Houston’s William P. Hobby Airport on Monday night the airline will do everything possible to right the challenges passengers have experienced, including “hotels, ride assistance, vans … rental cars to try and make sure these folks get home as quickly as possible.”

He promised that all customers, even those who had already left the airport or made alternate arrangements on their own, would also be taken care of.

“If you’ve already left, take care of yourself, do what you need to do for your family, keep your receipts,” McVay relayed. “We will make sure they are taken care of, that is not a question.”

What’s wrong from a pilot’s point of view

Passengers look for their luggage at Hollywood Burbank Airport in California on Tuesday.

Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images

Speaking to CNN on Tuesday, the vice president of the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association, Capt. Mike Santoro, said the problems facing Southwest were the worst disruptions he’d experienced in 16 years at the airline.

He described last week’s storm as a catalyst that helped trigger major technical issues.

“What went wrong is that our IT infrastructure for scheduling software is vastly outdated,” he said. “It can’t handle the number of pilots, flight attendants that we have in the system, with our complex route network.

“We don’t have the normal hub the other major airlines do. We fly a point-to-point network, which can put our crews in the wrong places, without airplanes.”

He added: “It is frustrating for the pilots, the flight attendants and especially our passengers. We are tired of apologizing for Southwest, the pilots in the airline, our hearts go out to all of the passengers, they really do.”

CNN’s Gregory Wallace, Andy Rose, Andi Babineau, Adrienne Broaddus, Dave Alsap, Nick Valencia, David Goldman, Leslie Perrot, Carlos Suarez and Ross Levitt contributed to this story.

Read original article here

As Southwest flight cancellations continue, Buttigieg vows to hold airline accountable

(CNN) — Relief is still a few days away for passengers booked with Southwest Airlines this week, as the beleaguered airline continues to grapple with what US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has referred to as a complete meltdown of the system.

Out of the nearly 2,700 cancellations already made for Wednesday flights within, into or out of the United States as of 1:15 a.m. ET, 2,497 of them are operated by Southwest, according to flight tracking website FlightAware. Meanwhile, the website shows the airline has already canceled another 2,392 flights for Thursday.

Airports most affected by the Wednesday cancellations are Denver International, followed by Chicago Midway International, Baltimore/Washington International, Dallas Love Field, Nashville International, Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas and Phoenix Sky Harbor International.

Buttigieg says he spoke directly to Southwest CEO Bob Jordan on Tuesday about the thousands of flights that have been canceled this week with no immediate indication of when passengers can rebook.

“Their system really has completely melted down,” Buttigieg told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Tuesday.

“I made clear that our department will be holding them accountable for their responsibilities to customers, both to get them through this situation and to make sure that this can’t happen again.”

Tuesday at a glance

CNN’s Carlos Suarez reports from Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport, where travelers are braving long lines and flight cancellations after a massive winter storm swept through the US.

More than 3,200 flights within, into or out of the United States were canceled on Tuesday, according to FlightAware.

Of those canceled flights, some 2,693 were those of Southwest — a stunning 84% of all canceled flights in the United States.

Long lines of travelers attempting to rebook or make connections were witnessed at Southwest ticket counters at multiple US airports on Tuesday, while huge piles of unclaimed bags continued to grow as passengers struggled to reclaim their luggage in airports including Chicago’s Midway International, Harry Reid in Las Vegas and William P. Hobby Airport in Houston.

Passenger Trisha Jones told CNN at the airport in Atlanta that she and her partner had been traveling for five days, trying to get home to Wichita, Kansas, after disembarking from a cruise at Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

After her flight out was canceled, she stayed with relatives, then rerouted to Atlanta to pick up a connecting flight.

“We were fortunate, because we were in Fort Lauderdale — my family lives in the Tampa bay area so we were able to rent a car to go see my family for Christmas,” Jones said. “We’ve seen a lot of families who are sleeping on the floor, and it just breaks my heart.”

Buttigieg: ‘A lot of cleaning up to do’

Cancelled Southwest Airlines flights are displayed on an information board at California’s Oakland International Airport on Tuesday.

Bloomberg/Bloomberg/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Southwest has blamed the travel disaster on several factors, including winter storm delays, aggressive flight scheduling and outdated infrastructure.

“From what I can tell, Southwest is unable to locate even where their own crews are, let alone their own passengers, let alone baggage,” said Buttigieg, adding that he also spoke with leaders of the airline’s unions representing flight attendants and pilots.

The secretary said he told CEO Jordan that he expects Southwest to proactively offer refunds and expense reimbursement to affected passengers without them having to ask.

“I conveyed to the CEO our expectation that they going to go above and beyond to take care of passengers and to address this,” he said.

Buttigieg told CNN the Department of Transportation is prepared to pursue fines against Southwest if there is evidence that the company has failed to meet its legal obligations, but he added that the department will be taking a closer look at consistent customer service problems at the airline.

“While all of the other parts of the aviation system have been moving toward recovery and getting better each day, it’s actually been moving the opposite direction with this airline,” said Buttigieg.

“You’ve got a company here that’s got a lot of cleaning up to do,” he said.

Southwest CEO issues video apology

Jordan apologized to passengers and employees in a video statement released by the company on Tuesday evening.

“We’re doing everything we can to return to a normal operation, and please also hear that I am truly sorry,” Jordan said.

While Jordan acknowledged problems with the company response, the statement suggested that he did not foresee massive changes to Southwest’s procedures in response to the mass cancellations.

“The tools we use to recover from disruption serve us well 99% of the time, but clearly we need to double-down on our already-existing plans to upgrade systems for these extreme circumstances so that we never again face what’s happening right now,” said Jordan.

“We’re optimistic to be back on track before next week.”

Is there anything passengers can do?

Katy Nastro, spokesperson for Scott’s Cheap Flights, shares her tips on what to do if your flight is delayed or canceled.

Southwest has warned that this week’s cancellations and delays are expected to continue for several more days.

So what should customers do?

“First things first, travelers who are still stuck waiting on Southwest and need to get somewhere should try to book a flight with another airline as soon as possible … right now, really,” said Kyle Potter, executive editor at the travel advice website Thrifty Traveler, in an email to CNN Travel late Tuesday afternoon.

“Every airline in the country is jam-packed right now, so your odds of even finding a seat — let alone at an even halfway decent price — get smaller by the hour,” Potter said.

“Travelers in the thick of this should be sure to save all their receipts: other flights, a rental car, nights at the hotel, meals, anything,” Potter said.

If you’ve been left in the lurch and your efforts to reach a customer service agent are going nowhere, the founder of Scott’s Cheap Flights suggests trying an international number.

“The main hotline for US airlines will be clogged with other passengers getting rebooked. To get through to an agent quickly, call any one of the airline’s dozens of international offices,” Scott Keyes said.

“Agents can handle your reservation just like US-based ones can, but there’s virtually no wait to get through.”

Click here to get international numbers that Southwest has previously posted.

Southwest: ‘Keep your receipts’

After their flight was canceled, 13 strangers decided to rent a van and drive all the way from Orlando to Knoxville, Tennessee.

Southwest spokesperson Jay McVay said in a news conference at Houston’s William P. Hobby Airport on Monday night the airline will do everything possible to right the challenges passengers have experienced, including “hotels, ride assistance, vans … rental cars to try and make sure these folks get home as quickly as possible.”

He promised that all customers, even those who had already left the airport or made alternate arrangements on their own, would also be taken care of.

“If you’ve already left, take care of yourself, do what you need to do for your family, keep your receipts,” McVay relayed. “We will make sure they are taken care of, that is not a question.”

What’s wrong from a pilot’s point of view

Passengers look for their luggage at Hollywood Burbank Airport in California on Tuesday.

Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images

Speaking to CNN on Tuesday, the vice president of the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association, Capt. Mike Santoro, said the problems facing Southwest were the worst disruptions he’d experienced in 16 years at the airline.

He described last week’s storm as a catalyst that helped trigger major technical issues.

“What went wrong is that our IT infrastructure for scheduling software is vastly outdated,” he said. “It can’t handle the number of pilots, flight attendants that we have in the system, with our complex route network.

“We don’t have the normal hub the other major airlines do. We fly a point-to-point network, which can put our crews in the wrong places, without airplanes.”

He added: “It is frustrating for the pilots, the flight attendants and especially our passengers. We are tired of apologizing for Southwest, the pilots in the airline, our hearts go out to all of the passengers, they really do.”

CNN’s Andy Rose, Andi Babineau, Adrienne Broaddus, Dave Alsap, Nick Valencia, David Goldman, Leslie Perrot, Carlos Suarez and Ross Levitt contributed to this story.

Read original article here

As Southwest flight cancellations continue, Buttigieg vows to hold airline accountable

(CNN) — Relief is still a few days away for passengers booked with Southwest Airlines this week, as the beleaguered airline continues to grapple with what US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has referred to as a complete meltdown of the system.

Out of the 2,714 cancellations already made for Wednesday flights within, into or out of the United States as of 3:15 a.m. ET, 2,504 of them are operated by Southwest, according to flight tracking website FlightAware. Meanwhile, the website shows the airline has already canceled another 2,356 flights for Thursday.

Airports most affected by the Wednesday cancellations are Denver International, followed by Chicago Midway International, Baltimore/Washington International, Dallas Love Field, Nashville International, Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas and Phoenix Sky Harbor International.

Buttigieg says he spoke directly to Southwest CEO Bob Jordan on Tuesday about the thousands of flights that have been canceled this week with no immediate indication of when passengers can rebook.

“Their system really has completely melted down,” Buttigieg told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Tuesday.

“I made clear that our department will be holding them accountable for their responsibilities to customers, both to get them through this situation and to make sure that this can’t happen again.”

Tuesday at a glance

CNN’s Carlos Suarez reports from Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport, where travelers are braving long lines and flight cancellations after a massive winter storm swept through the US.

More than 3,200 flights within, into or out of the United States were canceled on Tuesday, according to FlightAware.

Of those canceled flights, some 2,693 were those of Southwest — a stunning 84% of all canceled flights in the United States.

Long lines of travelers attempting to rebook or make connections were witnessed at Southwest ticket counters at multiple US airports on Tuesday, while huge piles of unclaimed bags continued to grow as passengers struggled to reclaim their luggage in airports including Chicago’s Midway International, Harry Reid in Las Vegas and William P. Hobby Airport in Houston.

Passenger Trisha Jones told CNN at the airport in Atlanta that she and her partner had been traveling for five days, trying to get home to Wichita, Kansas, after disembarking from a cruise at Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

After her flight out was canceled, she stayed with relatives, then rerouted to Atlanta to pick up a connecting flight.

“We were fortunate, because we were in Fort Lauderdale — my family lives in the Tampa bay area so we were able to rent a car to go see my family for Christmas,” Jones said. “We’ve seen a lot of families who are sleeping on the floor, and it just breaks my heart.”

Buttigieg: ‘A lot of cleaning up to do’

Cancelled Southwest Airlines flights are displayed on an information board at California’s Oakland International Airport on Tuesday.

Bloomberg/Bloomberg/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Southwest has blamed the travel disaster on several factors, including winter storm delays, aggressive flight scheduling and outdated infrastructure.

“From what I can tell, Southwest is unable to locate even where their own crews are, let alone their own passengers, let alone baggage,” said Buttigieg, adding that he also spoke with leaders of the airline’s unions representing flight attendants and pilots.

The secretary said he told CEO Jordan that he expects Southwest to proactively offer refunds and expense reimbursement to affected passengers without them having to ask.

“I conveyed to the CEO our expectation that they going to go above and beyond to take care of passengers and to address this,” he said.

Buttigieg told CNN the Department of Transportation is prepared to pursue fines against Southwest if there is evidence that the company has failed to meet its legal obligations, but he added that the department will be taking a closer look at consistent customer service problems at the airline.

“While all of the other parts of the aviation system have been moving toward recovery and getting better each day, it’s actually been moving the opposite direction with this airline,” said Buttigieg.

“You’ve got a company here that’s got a lot of cleaning up to do,” he said.

Southwest CEO issues video apology

Jordan apologized to passengers and employees in a video statement released by the company on Tuesday evening.

“We’re doing everything we can to return to a normal operation, and please also hear that I am truly sorry,” Jordan said.

While Jordan acknowledged problems with the company response, the statement suggested that he did not foresee massive changes to Southwest’s procedures in response to the mass cancellations.

“The tools we use to recover from disruption serve us well 99% of the time, but clearly we need to double-down on our already-existing plans to upgrade systems for these extreme circumstances so that we never again face what’s happening right now,” said Jordan.

“We’re optimistic to be back on track before next week.”

Is there anything passengers can do?

Katy Nastro, spokesperson for Scott’s Cheap Flights, shares her tips on what to do if your flight is delayed or canceled.

Southwest has warned that this week’s cancellations and delays are expected to continue for several more days.

So what should customers do?

“First things first, travelers who are still stuck waiting on Southwest and need to get somewhere should try to book a flight with another airline as soon as possible … right now, really,” said Kyle Potter, executive editor at the travel advice website Thrifty Traveler, in an email to CNN Travel late Tuesday afternoon.

“Every airline in the country is jam-packed right now, so your odds of even finding a seat — let alone at an even halfway decent price — get smaller by the hour,” Potter said.

“Travelers in the thick of this should be sure to save all their receipts: other flights, a rental car, nights at the hotel, meals, anything,” Potter said.

If you’ve been left in the lurch and your efforts to reach a customer service agent are going nowhere, the founder of Scott’s Cheap Flights suggests trying an international number.

“The main hotline for US airlines will be clogged with other passengers getting rebooked. To get through to an agent quickly, call any one of the airline’s dozens of international offices,” Scott Keyes said.

“Agents can handle your reservation just like US-based ones can, but there’s virtually no wait to get through.”

Click here to get international numbers that Southwest has previously posted.

Southwest: ‘Keep your receipts’

After their flight was canceled, 13 strangers decided to rent a van and drive all the way from Orlando to Knoxville, Tennessee.

Southwest spokesperson Jay McVay said in a news conference at Houston’s William P. Hobby Airport on Monday night the airline will do everything possible to right the challenges passengers have experienced, including “hotels, ride assistance, vans … rental cars to try and make sure these folks get home as quickly as possible.”

He promised that all customers, even those who had already left the airport or made alternate arrangements on their own, would also be taken care of.

“If you’ve already left, take care of yourself, do what you need to do for your family, keep your receipts,” McVay relayed. “We will make sure they are taken care of, that is not a question.”

What’s wrong from a pilot’s point of view

Passengers look for their luggage at Hollywood Burbank Airport in California on Tuesday.

Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images

Speaking to CNN on Tuesday, the vice president of the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association, Capt. Mike Santoro, said the problems facing Southwest were the worst disruptions he’d experienced in 16 years at the airline.

He described last week’s storm as a catalyst that helped trigger major technical issues.

“What went wrong is that our IT infrastructure for scheduling software is vastly outdated,” he said. “It can’t handle the number of pilots, flight attendants that we have in the system, with our complex route network.

“We don’t have the normal hub the other major airlines do. We fly a point-to-point network, which can put our crews in the wrong places, without airplanes.”

He added: “It is frustrating for the pilots, the flight attendants and especially our passengers. We are tired of apologizing for Southwest, the pilots in the airline, our hearts go out to all of the passengers, they really do.”

CNN’s Andy Rose, Andi Babineau, Adrienne Broaddus, Dave Alsap, Nick Valencia, David Goldman, Leslie Perrot, Carlos Suarez and Ross Levitt contributed to this story.

Read original article here

Pete Buttigieg warns Southwest CEO he will hold airline accountable

(CNN) — Southwest Airline’s operational meltdown has put the Dallas-headquartered company under serious scrutiny — not only from stranded passengers and media reports but from US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg as well.

He spoke directly to Southwest CEO Bob Jordan on Tuesday about the thousands of flights that have been canceled this week with no immediate indication of when passengers can rebook.

“Their system really has completely melted down,” Buttigieg told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Tuesday.

“I made clear that our department will be holding them accountable for their responsibilities to customers, both to get them through this situation and to make sure that this can’t happen again.”

Passengers booked with beleaguered Southwest Airlines have been hoping for some much-needed relief on cancellations and delays. But those hopes — so far — are being dashed.

Out of the more than 2,640 cancellations already made for Wednesday, nearly all of them belong to Southwest.

All other US airlines together account for just roughly 155 of those cancellations.

Latest flight cancellation and delay figures

A look at current numbers show why Buttigieg is so concerned.

Almost 3,200 flights within, into or out of the United States have already been canceled for Tuesday as of 9:30 p.m. ET, according to flight tracking website FlightAware.

Of those canceled flights, some 2,680 were those of Southwest. That was almost two-thirds of all Southwest flights for Tuesday and a stunning 84% of all canceled flights in the United States.

By contrast, competitors Alaska Airlines had 10% of its flights canceled and United Airlines had only 3%.

Airports most affected by the Tuesday cancellations have been Denver International, followed by Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas, Chicago Midway International, Baltimore/Washington International, Nashville International and Dallas Love Field.

There were almost 6,800 delays as of 9:30 p.m. ET Tuesday.

Today’s cancellations followed a full day of post-Christmas travel chaos, with 3,989 flights canceled on Monday — 2,909 of those being Southwest flights.

Buttigieg takes Southwest to task

Southwest has blamed the travel disaster on a combination of factors, including winter storm delays, aggressive flight scheduling and outdated infrastructure.

“From what I can tell, Southwest is unable to locate even where their own crews are, let alone their own passengers, let alone baggage,” said Buttigieg, adding that he also spoke with leaders of the airline’s unions representing flight attendants and pilots.

The secretary said he told CEO Jordan that he expects Southwest to proactively offer refunds and expense reimbursement to affected passengers without them having to ask.

“I conveyed to the CEO our expectation that they going to go above and beyond to take care of passengers and to address this,” he said.

Buttigieg told CNN the Department of Transportation is prepared to pursue fines against Southwest if there is evidence that the company has failed to meet its legal obligations, but he added that the department will be taking a closer look at consistent customer service problems at the airline.

“While all of the other parts of the aviation system have been moving toward recovery and getting better each day, it’s actually been moving the opposite direction with this airline,” said Buttigieg.

“You’ve got a company here that’s got a lot of cleaning up to do,” he said.

A video apology

Jordan apologized to passengers and employees in a video statement released by the company on Tuesday evening.

“We’re doing everything we can to return to a normal operation, and please also hear that I am truly sorry,” Jordan said.

While Jordan acknowledged problems with the company response, the statement suggested that he did not foresee massive changes to Southwest’s procedures in response to the mass cancellations.

“The tools we use to recover from disruption serve us well 99% of the time, but clearly we need to double-down on our already-existing plans to upgrade systems for these extreme circumstances so that we never again face what’s happening right now,” said Jordan.

“We’re optimistic to be back on track before next week.”

So what can Southwest passengers do?

Katy Nastro, spokesperson for Scott’s Cheap Flights, shares her tips on what to do if your flight is delayed or canceled.

Southwest has warned that this week’s cancellations and delays are expected to continue for several more days.

So where does that leave customers who are in a real jam? What should they do?

“First things first, travelers who are still stuck waiting on Southwest and need to get somewhere should try to book a flight with another airline as soon as possible … right now, really,” said Kyle Potter, executive editor at the travel advice website Thrifty Traveler, in an email to CNN Travel late Tuesday afternoon.

“Every airline in the country is jam-packed right now, so your odds of even finding a seat — let alone at an even halfway decent price — get smaller by the hour,” Potter said.

“Travelers in the thick of this should be sure to save all their receipts: other flights, a rental car, nights at the hotel, meals, anything,” Potter said.

If you’ve been left in the lurch and your efforts to reach a customer service agent are going nowhere, the founder of Scott’s Cheap Flights suggests trying an international number.

“The main hotline for US airlines will be clogged with other passengers getting rebooked. To get through to an agent quickly, call any one of the airline’s dozens of international offices,” Scott Keyes said.

“Agents can handle your reservation just like US-based ones can, but there’s virtually no wait to get through.”

Multiplying problems

Southwest was hit particularly hard because of a cascade of issues.

The storm slammed two of its biggest hubs — Chicago and Denver — at a time when winter ailments were stretching staff rosters. Southwest’s aggressive schedule and underinvestment have also been blamed.

The winter storm that swept across the country was ill-timed for travelers who had started pushing Christmas week flying numbers back toward pre-pandemic levels.

On Christmas Day, 3,178 flights were canceled and 6,870 were delayed, according to FlightAware. On Christmas Eve, there were a total of 3,487 flights canceled, according to FlightAware.

Friday was the worst day of this streak with 5,934 cancellations, while Thursday saw almost 2,700 cancellations.

Long lines and bag buildups at airports

Travelers wait at a Southwest Airlines baggage counter to retrieve their bags after canceled flights at Los Angeles International Airport, Monday, December 26, 2022, in Los Angeles.

Eugene Garcia/AP

At the Southwest ticket counter at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Tuesday morning, long lines were already building up as travelers waited to try to rebook flights or make connections.

And at Chicago’s Midway International, huge buildups of unclaimed bags piled up as passengers struggled to reclaim their luggage. There were similar scenes at other airports including Harry Reid in Las Vegas and William P. Hobby Airport in Houston.

Passenger Trisha Jones told CNN at the airport in Atlanta that she and her partner had been traveling for five days, trying to get home to Wichita, Kansas, after disembarking from a cruise at Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

After her flight out was canceled, she stayed with relatives then rerouted to Atlanta to pick up a connecting flight.

“We were fortunate, because we were in Fort Lauderdale — my family lives in the Tampa bay area so we were able to rent a car to go see my family for Christmas,” Jones said. “We’ve seen a lot of families who are sleeping on the floor, and it just breaks my heart.”

Southwest: ‘Keep your receipts’

A spokesperson for Southwest Airlines said the recent winter storm is to blame for the cascade of cancellations.

“As the storm continued to sweep across the country it continued to impact many of our larger stations and so the cancellations just compiled one after another to 100 to 150 to 1,000,” Jay McVay said in a news conference at Houston’s William P. Hobby Airport on Monday night.

“With those cancellations and as a result, we end up with flight crews and airplanes that are out of place and not in the cities that they need to be in to continue to run our operations.”

McVay said that the company’s first priority right now is safety. “We want to make sure that we operate these flights safely and that we have the flight crews that have legal and sufficient time to operate these flights,” he stated.

“We will do everything that we need to do to right the challenges that we’ve had right now,” he said, including “hotels, ride assistance, vans … rental cars to try and make sure these folks get home as quickly as possible.”

He promised that all customers, even those who had already left the airport or made alternate arrangements on their own, would also be taken care of.

“If you’ve already left, take care of yourself, do what you need to do for your family, keep your receipts,” McVay relayed. “We will make sure they are taken care of, that is not a question.”

What’s wrong from a pilot’s point of view

Speaking to CNN on Tuesday, the vice president of the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association, Capt. Mike Santoro, said the problems facing Southwest were the worst disruptions he’d experienced in 16 years at the airline.

He described last week’s storm as a catalyst that helped trigger major technical issues.

“What went wrong is that our IT infrastructure for scheduling software is vastly outdated,” he said. “It can’t handle the number of pilots, flight attendants that we have in the system, with our complex route network. 

“We don’t have the normal hub the other major airlines do. We fly a point-to-point network, which can put our crews in the wrong places, without airplanes.”

He added: “It is frustrating for the pilots, the flight attendants and especially our passengers. We are tired of apologizing for Southwest, the pilots in the airline, our hearts go out to all of the passengers, they really do.”

In other developments

Buffalo, New York, has been particularly hard it by the winter storm.

Joed Viera/AFP/Getty Images

• In hard-hit western New York, Buffalo International Airport said in its most recent tweet that it does not plan to resume passenger flights before 11 a.m. ET Wednesday, pushing back the expected reopening by another 24 hours later than previously anticipated.
• Greyhound, the largest provider of intercity bus service, issued a service alert on Tuesday morning stating many of its scheduled services in the upper northeast continued to be disrupted until further notice due to winter weather. Affected cities include Buffalo, Cleveland and Syracuse.

CNN’s Andy Rose, Andi Babineau, Adrienne Broaddus, Dave Alsap, Nick Valencia, David Goldman, Leslie Perrot, Carlos Suarez and Ross Levitt contributed to this story.



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GOP lawmakers respond to latest ‘Twitter Files’ detailing Trump’s ban, vow Big Tech will ‘be held accountable’

The third installment of the “Twitter Files” released Friday, showing the company’s internal communications around the Jan. 6 Capitol Riot and what led up to the decision to ban then-President Donald Trump from the platform.

They also showed how Twitter coordinated with the FBI for the censorship of individuals and how executives governed the platform with an iron fist: barring user engagement for tweets they did not like, or presumed to be false.

“It’s even worse than we thought,” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Missouri, tweeted Friday evening.

The worries by conservatives that they were victims of blacklists, suspensions, and shadowbanning were all true, the files showed — contrary to testimony from the company’s executives.

TWITTER FILES PART 3 REVEALS WHAT LED TO TRUMP’S REMOVAL FROM SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM

Hawley added: “It is hard to count the number of lies Twitter executives told under oath to Congress.”

Rep Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, echoed: “They told us Twitter didn’t shadow ban. False.”

Jordan, who was recently selected to become the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee when Republicans overtake the majority in the House of Representatives in January, similarly said the Twitter tyranny was “worse than we thought.”

A photo illustration of Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Missouri, on Capitol Hill, April 4, 2022 in Washington, DC, and Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, on July 21, 2021 in Washington, D; with the Twitter logo in San Francisco, California, on October 28, 2022. 
(Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images/CONSTANZA HEVIA/AFP via Getty Images)

“What’s worse,” Jordan asked his 3.4 million followers, “Former Twitter executives lying about shadow banning [or] the media ignoring the story or promoting those lies?”

In January, House Republicans will gain the power to launch congressional investigations and host committee hearings.

At that time, “Big Tech will be held accountable for their flagrant bias,” said Rep. Pat Fallon, R-Texas.

Earlier on Friday, “part one” of the third “Twitter Files” installment was released via Substack writer Matt Taibbi.

The internal documents, dated from October 2020-January 2021, show “the erosion of standards within the company in months before J6, decisions by high-ranking executives to violate their own policies, and more, against the backdrop of ongoing, documented interaction with federal agencies,” Taibbi told his followers.

“Whatever your opinion on the decision to remove Trump that day, the internal communications at Twitter between January 6th-January 8th have clear historical import. Even Twitter’s employees understood in the moment it was a landmark moment in the annals of speech,” he added.

Taibbi reported that executives at Twitter “started processing new power” following their decision to ban Trump, indicating they were “prepared to ban future presidents and White Houses – perhaps even Joe Biden. The ‘new administration,’ says one exec, ‘will not be suspended by Twitter unless absolutely necessary.’”

The communications also showed Twitter executives and staff operating in coordination with the FBI and other federal agencies.

Twitter CEO Elon Musk, though, defended the efforts of the FBI.

“With rare exception, the FBI seems to want to do the right thing, but there is no question that Twitter operated as a Democratic Party activist machine,” Musk tweeted.

MUSK REACTS AFTER BIDEN SWAPS RUSSIAN ARMS DEALER FOR WNBA STAR BRITTNEY GRINER: ‘NEVER LEAVE A MARINE BEHIND’

The release comes the day after Musk shared “Part Deux” of the “Twitter Files” on Thursday, showing how the company would “build blacklists” of certain users or tweets.

The internal documents were shared with journalist Bari Weiss.

“A new #TwitterFiles investigation reveals that teams of Twitter employees build blacklists, prevent disfavored tweets from trending, and actively limit the visibility of entire accounts or even trending topics—all in secret, without informing users,” Weiss said in a thread.

ELON MUSK’S SECOND INSTALLMENT OF ‘TWITTER FILES’ REVEALS ‘SECRET BLACKLISTS,’ BARI WEISS REPORTS

Weiss then recalled Twitter heads previously denying that they performed such actions.

“In 2018, Twitter’s Vijaya Gadde (then Head of Legal Policy and Trust) and Kayvon Beykpour (Head of Product) said: ‘We do not shadow ban.’ They added: ‘And we certainly don’t shadow ban based on political viewpoints or ideology,’” he reported.

In an aerial view, a sign is seen posted on the exterior of Twitter headquarters on April 27, 2022 in San Francisco, California. 
(Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

TWITTER FILES FLASHBACK: JACK DORSEY TESTIFIED UNDER OATH TWITTER DOES NOT CENSOR, ‘SHADOW-BAN’ CONSERVATIVES

Gadde and Beykpour simply had another name for the action, Weiss reported, as Twitter executives and employees called the process of diminishing a person’s reach on the platform “visibility filtering” or “VF.”

“Think about visibility filtering as being a way for us to suppress what people see to different levels. It’s a very powerful tool,” Weiss reported, citing a “senior Twitter employee.”

Musk confirmed in a later tweet that “some accounts on the right were suspended even when Twitter internally acknowledged that no rules were broken.”

ELON MUSK REVEALS WHAT LED TO TWITTER SUPPRESSING HUNTER BIDEN STORY IN 2020

The major reveal comes days after the initial installment of internal documents showed a glimpse at the company’s general content moderation protocols.

Musk shared the first “Twitter Files” with Substack journalist Matt Taibbi.

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According to the Musk-provided and Taibbi-shared information, Twitter’s ever-persistent content moderation was a “decision was made at the highest levels of the company, but without the knowledge of CEO Jack Dorsey, with former head of legal, policy and trust Vijaya Gadde playing a key role.”

Musk has promised transparency as he moves forward with leading the company. 

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