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DENVER, CO - DECEMBER 27: The line of customers for Southwest Airlines bag drop at Denver International Airport, begins on the right, winding into the terminal, and continues on the left, as Southwest flights out of DIA continue to be delayed or canceled on December 27, 2022 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO – DECEMBER 27: The line of customers for Southwest Airlines bag drop at Denver International Airport, begins on the right, winding into the terminal, and continues on the left, as Southwest flights out of DIA continue to be delayed or canceled on December 27, 2022 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo By Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post)
UPDATED:

More than 650 flights in and out of Denver International Airport have been canceled on Wednesday and Thursday as Southwest Airlines works through major system and staffing challenges.

About 75% of Wednesday’s 392 cancellations at DIA as of late afternoon were Southwest flights. The airline has said it expected to call off most of its flights nationally for several more days as it hopes to “rebalance” the airline by moving its crews and planes to the right airports after a winter storm just before Christmas weekend caused major disruptions in many cities across the United States. Southwest’s problems then were compounded by staffing and system failures.

Southwest’s cancellations at DIA Wednesday and Thursday, 292 and 272 flights respectively, are nearly evenly split between arrivals and departures and account for 50% or slightly more of the airline’s schedule through Denver.

Wednesday’s other cancellations at DIA consist of 87 SkyWest flights, which are operated on regional jets for major airlines; six Frontier flights; five CommutAir flights; and two Spirit flights. For Thursday, SkyWest canceled six flights and Frontier canceled two flights so far.

Southwest Airlines CEO Bob Jordan, in a video statement posted to Twitter on Tuesday night, apologized to customers and employees and said the airline was doing “everything we can to return to a normal operation.”

“With our large fleet of airplanes and flight crews out of position in dozens of locations, and after days of trying to operate our full schedule across the busy holiday weekend, we reached a decision point to significantly reduce our flying to catch up,” Jordan said. “We’re focused on safely getting all of the pieces back into position to end this rolling struggle.”

Jordan said he talked with U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg to discuss what the airline is doing to “make things right” for customers, and Jordan said he is optimistic Southwest can get “back on track before next week.”

Another winter storm heading for Denver Wednesday night could add some airport troubles Thursday morning as the high-end amount of snowfall forecast at DIA is 7.5 inches.

Rain will start falling Wednesday afternoon before changing to snow between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Forecasters at the National Weather Service in Boulder said the snow will begin sticking to pavement “very shortly” after it begins falling.

Snowfall could be moderate to heavy with rates of up to two inches per hour possible. It will be a “heavy, wet snow” due to relatively warm temperatures.

The storm’s total snowfall will most likely be between two and four inches, but anywhere from one to eight inches are possible.

Originally Published: