LUFTHANSA Publishes Special Timetable For November 25, 2016

LUFTHANSA Publishes Special Timetable For November 25, 2016

Lufthansa has once again been forced to published an amended timetable to reflect the impact of the third consecutive day of strikes that have forced Lufthansa to cancel thousands of flights.

The new timetable can be found by following this link.

As always, If your flights have been affected, you’ll have the option to rebook via LH.com, calling your local Lufthansa reservation office, or your travel agent.    Most stories that I hear from passengers affected by the strike suggest that it was fairly easy for them to be re-accommodated.

and…

Happy Thanksgiving to those that the holiday applies to!

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LUFTHANSA Publishes Special Timetable For November 25, 2016

LUFTHANSA Strike EXTENDED TO NOVEMBER 25……

The idiots that run the union have absolutely lost their minds.

In their infinite stupidity and unprofessionalism, they’ve extended their strike yet again to include all of Friday, November 25.

With this announcement happening just minutes ago, I’m sure we’ll hear more from Lufthansa which will include yet another special timetable to reflect cancelled flights.

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LUFTHANSA Publishes Special Timetable For November 25, 2016

LUFTHANSA Publishes Special Timetable For November 24, 2016

Lufthansa has published a special timetable to take into account the strike that will impact operations tomorrow, November 24, 2016.

Based on the latest news, LH has once again been forced to cancel several hundred flights.   Use the following link to see if your flights are impacted:

 Lufthansa has published a special web-page that allows you to check on the status of your flights.

If you need to change your flight, you have a few options:  Check your reservation on LH.com to see if you were already taken care of by Lufthansa, call your local LH reservation office (but expect a long hold time), or contact your travel agent if you used one to book your ticket.

Also, you can keep tabs on the latest developments via Lufthansa’s dedicated Twitter account for LH news:  @LufthansaNews.    They do an excellent job with providing the most up to date info as it becomes available.

Though the number seems high, LH has always done a good job with re-accommodating passengers to other flight with other carriers, even non-Lufthansa Group airlines.    So even with nearly 1,000 flights canceled for tomorrow there is a good chance that the majority of impacted passengers will still be able to reach their destination.

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LUFTHANSA Publishes Special Timetable For November 25, 2016

LUFTHANSA STRIKE EXTENDED TO NOVEMBER 24

The radical jackasses that have must taken over the sham union known as Vereinigung Cockpit have announced that the strike that was scheduled only for tomorrow has now been extended to to include all of November 24 as well.

The same terms apparently apply as far as which flights will be impacted.   Which means that short and long haul flights originating from Germany will be at risk.  This will also compound the problem for Lufthansa since planes will not be able to easily reposition for flights on November 25 as well.

Lufthansa will publish a special timetable for November 24 in the coming hours.

I wonder when Lufthansa pilots will wake up to the fact that they are being played as pawns by the idiots who run the union for their personal gain.   Must be nice to prey upon the victims you pretend to represent.

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LUFTHANSA Publishes Special Timetable For November 25, 2016

LUFTHANSA Announces Modified Timetable Ahead Of Tomorrow’s Strike

Lufthansa has published a special timetable to take into account the strike that will impact operations tomorrow.   As I mentioned yesterday, the strike will be far reaching and will impact a substantial part of LH’s schedule tomorrow.

Based on the latest news, LH has cancelled 876 of their 3200 regularly scheduled flights, so the impact is not as bad as I had feared, nor is it as bad as past strikes where nearly every flight would be canceled for the day.  The strike only impacts mainline operations.

 Lufthansa has published a special web-page that allows you to check on the status of your flights.

If you need to change your flight, you have a few options:  Check your reservation on LH.com to see if you were already taken care of by Lufthansa, call your local LH reservation office (but expect a long hold time), or contact your travel agent if you used one to book your ticket.

Also, you can keep tabs on the latest developments via Lufthansa’s dedicated Twitter account for LH news:  @LufthansaNews.    They do an excellent job with providing the most up to date info as it becomes available.

Though the number seems high, LH has always done a good job with re-accommodating passengers to other flight with other carriers, even non-Lufthansa Group airlines.    So even with nearly 1,000 flights canceled for tomorrow there is a good chance that the majority of impacted passengers will still be able to reach their destination.

It was a s**t move by the union to call the strike on the day before Thanksgiving, which is the busiest travel day of the year for the USA.  But it is what it is when you’re dealing with a bunch of uber cry-babies that represent Lufthansa’s pilots and influence them so badly.  It’s asinine stunts like this that make it difficult for Lufthansa to settle the dispute.   Cancelling nearly 1,000 flights on a very busy travel day is no way to extend any sense of goodwill when LH is trying to work towards a solution.  Where I come from we call it bush league bulls–t.


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