I’d say they were rebooked. Also the 2 is operating at this stage on the 12th and they’ll be using OQL. I’d say a big part of cancelling the QF1 on 11/9 was crewing up the line.Probably due to the 24 hours delayed QF2 with A388 VH-OQL, on Thursday 11 September, QF1 (1450 hours SYD-SIN-LHR) is cancelled. This will mean QF2 ex LHR on Friday 12 is also getting the boot.
Will up to c.450 passengers in each direction be booked on QF9/QF10 if spare seats, or on competitors' flights?
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Probably due to the 24 hours delayed QF2 with A388 VH-OQL, on Thursday 11 September, QF1 (1450 hours SYD-SIN-LHR) is cancelled. This will mean QF2 ex LHR on Friday 12 is also getting the boot.
Will up to c.450 passengers in each direction be booked on QF9/QF10 if spare seats, or on competitors' flights?
Apparently due to staff shortages at Sydney Airport, Airservices Australia has been limiting flights to four minutes apart since 1000 hours and has cancelled any takeoffs between 1530 and 1600 hours today, Friday 12 September.
Can you provide any evidence that absent ATCs are actually not unwell? Or that this is a coordinated effort by a union?As one example of air traffic controller-related delays, B738 VH-VZF arrived ex MEL in SYD at 1458 hours, three minutes late (QF446) but its next flight, QF651 (the 1545 hours across to PER) only took off at 1640.
Perhaps Airservices staff shortages are due to genuine illnesses, stress or an inability of management to retain sufficient fully trained staff, but there's also the possibility some might have just 'taken a sickie', conveniently on a Friday.
Never underestimate the corrosive influence of unions in Oz. Only 13 per cent of the total workforce are members, but unions have sway in essential sectors like transport. No wonder productivity in Australia is receding.