JetBlue Becomes the Latest U.S.-Based Airline to Reduce Flights to Haiti

April 21, 2023
First it was American Airlines. Now JetBlue Airways is cutting back on flights to Haiti.

First it was American Airlines. Now JetBlue Airways is cutting back on flights to Haiti. The latest change, however, affects only the U.S.-based carrier’s route from John F. Kennedy Airport in New York to Port-au-Prince, but still means higher air fares for U.S.-bound passengers trying to get out of the volatile Caribbean nation.

Beginning May 5 until June 14, JetBlue’s Port-au-Prince route out of New York will be reduced to twice weekly, Tuesdays and Saturdays. Then, from June 15 until Sept. 4, flight service will increase to four times a week: Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.

There is currently no change in the airline’s daily service between Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport and Port-au-Prince’s Toussaint Louverture International Airport, the airline confirmed to the Miami Herald.

The New York service cutbacks are due to a nationwide shortage of air traffic controllers and the Federal Aviation Administration encouraging all major airlines flying out of New York city airports — JetBlue, Delta, American and United — to cut service this summer because there aren’t enough air traffic controllers and it’s anticipating a busy travel summer.

JetBlue is the only U.S. carrier that flies directly to Haiti from the New York-New Jersey area where there is a growing Haitian diaspora, and sometimes its route presents a cheaper alternative for travelers trying to just get out of Haiti. Meanwhile, low-cost Broward-based Spirit Airlines does fly to Port-au-Prince out of Fort Lauderdale but only five days a week. There are no flights on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.

This week, the Miami Herald reported that American Airlines had not only reduced the size of its aircraft currently flying into Port-au-Prince out of Miami International Airport but that beginning May 9 the airline intends to cut back to just six flights a week from the current seven. The airline will not have any Tuesday flights. Air fares on the Miami route are also giving passengers sticker shock with costs of over $3,000.

In both cases, U.S.-bound passengers out of Haiti can expect to see higher fares and less availability at a time when more Haitians are qualifying to come to the U.S. thanks to a two-year humanitarian parole program rolled out by the Biden administration in January for nationals of Haiti, Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela.

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