By
Ellyn Briggs
March 2, 2023 at 12:30 pm ET
Since mid-December, the U.S. aviation industry has been beleaguered by high-profile technology and safety snafus, including Southwest Airlines Co.’s holiday scheduling meltdown that left tens of thousands of passengers stranded, the Federal Aviation Administration grounding all domestic departures due to a computer system outage and five collisions or near-collisions involving passenger jets on the runways of major airports.
Morning Consult tracking data shows that these incidents are negatively impacting sentiment toward the industry: Americans’ trust in airlines fell 5 percentage points between December and February, bringing the metric to its lowest level since tracking began in late 2021.
A new survey conducted after most of the incidents revealed how Americans are thinking about the airline industry more broadly in light of recent troubled months.
Close to half of U.S. adults (48%) and a slim majority of frequent flyers (54%) said the industry should be more regulated. Meanwhile, 83% of Americans said air traffic controllers are responsible for runway safety situations, significantly more than the share who blamed any other tested air travel entity.
Despite Americans’ considering airport-affiliated groups like air traffic control most accountable for recent on-the-ground safety episodes, airlines are still grappling with widespread customer and employee irritation. As a result, appeasing actions like United Airlines Inc.’s limiting of child seating fees and Delta Air Lines Inc.’s ratifying of a huge pilot pay bump will likely ripple across the industry throughout 2023.
The FAA is also navigating its own set of disgruntled stakeholders. In February, the regulatory body launched an internal safety review after facing multiple rounds of questioning by members of Congress over its competencies.
Travel habits may be continuing to return to normal, but the period of aviation industry upheaval initially spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic is proving it’s here to stay, at least for a little while longer.
The Feb. 24-26, 2023, survey was conducted among a representative sample of 2,202 U.S. adults, with an unweighted margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.