Correction: Spring Storm-Stranded Vacationers story
In a story April 16 about travelers stranded in Mexico after Sun Country Airlines ended seasonal service, The Associated Press reported erroneously that Apollo Global Management, a private equity firm that was acquiring Sun Country, had announced plans in February to cut 350 jobs from the airline's ground service. The plans to replace those workers with a third-party contractor were announced by Sun Country management.
A corrected version of the story is below:
100s of passengers stranded when airline ends Mexico service
Hundreds of travelers from Minnesota are stranded in Mexico because they are unable to rebook Sun Country Airlines flights that were canceled due to a storm at home, because the carrier has ended its seasonal service south of the border
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Hundreds of travelers from Minnesota who were left stranded in Mexico after Sun Country Airlines canceled flights due to a storm at home had to scramble to find flights on other airlines because the carrier had ended its seasonal service south of the border.
Sun Country, based in Eagan, Minnesota, said the flights from Los Cabos and Mazatlan that were canceled Saturday were the last of the season. Sun Country spokeswoman Kelsey Dodson-Smith said the airline couldn't send another plane to collect the stranded passengers because it would mean canceling other flights to other destinations, The Star Tribune reported.
Passengers will receive a refund for the return portion of their flight, the company said.
U.S. Sen. Tina Smith, a Minnesota Democrat, on Monday called on federal transportation officials to look into Sun Country's cancellations and explain what is being done to make sure that airline cancellation policies protect travelers.
"As many travelers are already financially squeezed by the airline industry, it is troublesome to see a domestic carrier abandoning its passengers in a foreign country, forcing them to find their own way home and to incur further expense of time and money," Smith wrote in a letter to the Department of Transportation.
Emily Kladivo of Emily's Travel Service helped some stranded passengers find alternative flights home. Heather Garnett and her family spent almost $2,000 to fly to Chicago and planned to drive back to Minneapolis, she said. Kladivo said she's never experienced a similar situation and criticized the airline's response.
"Weather is out of their control; how they're handling the situation is in their control," she said. "Send a plane, go get your passengers."
Even if the airline couldn't spare another plane, it could have chartered one or covered passengers' alternate travel arrangements, she said.
The debacle comes just as the airline's sale has been finalized. Mitch and Marty Davis decided to sell Sun Country to Apollo Global Management, a private equity firm, to help the company grow faster.
Sun Country has been undergoing several operational changes. The company announced plans in February to cut 350 jobs from the airline's ground service operations at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and replace them with a third-party contractor in an effort to be more efficient.