Senators to Airlines: What's Up With the Computer Outages?In their letters, Sens. Markey and Blumenthal 'inquire about safeguards and backups in place within airline IT systems.'

ByDon Reisinger

This story originally appeared onPCMag

Shutterstock

Frequent fliers aren't the only ones fed up with airline computer outages. In the wake of delays due to recent glitches with the systems of Southwest and Delta Air Lines, two US senators are asking for answers.

"We are concerned with recent reports indicating that airlines' IT systems may be susceptible to faltering because of the way they are designed and have been maintained," Democratic Sens. Edward J. Markey of Massachusetts and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut wrote in aletterto more than a dozen airlines.

Delta flights weregrounded earlier this month“一个暴击后ical power control module at our Technology Command Center malfunctioned, causing a surge to the transformer and a loss of power," according to COO Gil West. Southwest, meanwhile, had tocancel hundreds of flightslast month after its website went down.

In their letters, Markey and Blumenthal "inquire about safeguards and backups in place within airline IT systems to protect against power outages, cyberattacks and other hazards," they said in a statement. They also "ask the airlines about policies that would allow passengers to be rebooked on another airline or on a different mode of transportation in the event of irregular operations caused by the airlines, as well as about their reimbursement and compensation policies."

航空公司合并是没有帮助的情况下,y continued. "Now that four air carriers control approximately 85 percent of domestic capacity, all it takes is one airline to experience an outage and thousands of passengers could be stranded, resulting in missed business meetings, graduations, weddings, funerals and other prepaid events."

The senators' letter includes several queries, including how many times technology has caused an outage to air traffic, what safeguards are in place when systems fail, and the current state of the airline's IT system. They have asked the airline CEOs to respond to their queries by Sept.16.

Airlines that received the letter include American Airlines, Delta Airlines, Southwest Airlines, United Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Alaska Airlines, Spirit Airlines, Frontier Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, Allegiant Air, Virgin America, Sun Country Airlines and Island Air Hawaii.

Don Reisinger

Contributing Writer

Don Reisinger has been a contributing writer forFortunesince 2015.

Related Topics

Business News

Social Media App X Is Struggling to Attract Users — But Another Once-Beloved Platform Is Making an Unexpected Comeback

Agency executives say brands that have returned to X aren't spending as much on advertising.

Side Hustle

5 Critical Lessons I Learned Turning My Side Hustle Into a Million-Dollar Business

These tried-and-true tips will save you time, scale your business, and make you money.

Business News

This Man Won a $22 Million Lottery Jackpot, But He and His Wife Won't Tell Their Kids — Here's Why

An anonymous caller named "John" shared his story on a recent episode of "The Ramsey Show."

Business News

'Blood-Curdling Scream': FBI Investigating 'Attack' on Carnival Cruise Ship

The incident occurred on a Carnival Magic ship headed back to its port in Norfolk, Virginia.

领导

This 27-Year-Old Harvard Dropout Started a Hedge Fund Out of a Garage — Now She Manages Nearly $1 Billion in Assets

Eva Shang, who met co-founder and fellow Harvard undergraduate Christian Haigh at a club on campus, admits it's "very unusual for college students to start a hedge fund."