ap

Skip to content
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

NEW YORK — U.S. airlines curbed long delays in July and improved their on-time rates compared with a month and a year earlier, the Department of Transportation said Monday.

Only one plane got stuck on the tarmac for more than three hours in July — a Continental flight from Miami to Newark, N.J. It was diverted to Philadelphia because of bad weather and sat there for nearly three and a half hours. It arrived at Newark almost six hours late.

Long delays had strayed into double digits in May and June after nearly disappearing in April 2010, when the agency put into effect a rule threatening fines for such delays. No airlines have yet been fined.

The nation’s 16 biggest airlines reported an overall on- time rate of 77.8 percent in July, up from 76.7 percent a year earlier and 76.9 percent in June. Hawaiian and Alaska clinched the top spots. Southwest, which carries more passengers than any other airline, came in third. The worst on- time rates were at regional airlines Atlantic Southeast and ExpressJet, which run some flights for major carriers.

The airlines’ on-time rates may have improved in part because they canceled more flights. Cancellations were up from July 2010 but lower than in June, a month of more traffic and severe weather.

Complaints from consumers to the government about airline service rose 17.1 percent in July from a year earlier and 14 percent from June.

RevContent Feed

More in Business