Polish airline won't fly Jan 1st

greenspun.com : LUSENET : TimeBomb 2000 (Y2000) : One Thread

Polish LOT Cancels Flights On Jan 1 Due To Y2K

WARSAW (Reuters) - Poland's national airline LOT Monday said it would ground all its planes on January 1, 2000 to avoid millennium bug problems, in what is thought to be the first mass cancellation in Europe due to Y2K worries.

``The management has decided to cancel all flights on this sensitive day because of the possibility of complications or problems with the airline's infrastructure,'' company spokeswoman Monika Krajczynska told Reuters.

Krajczynska did not identify specific areas of concern and said flights on LOT's fleet of modern Boeing and other jets will resume service on January 2.

``We want to be mistake-free and that's why we are taking this step,'' she said. LOT flies to most major eastern and western European capitals, North America, and has a large charter operation that ferries Poles to holiday destinations.

She estimated the state-owned company's losses from the one-day grounding would be minimal because of the small number of travelers on New Year's Day.

The year 2000 or Y2K problem arises from the inability of some omputers and computer systems to recognize the date 2000, since they were programmed to read only the last two digits of a year.

The glitch may cause computers to malfunction or shut down, a potentially disastrous occurrence if it hits air traffic management systems or equipment on-board jet aircraft.

Many large European and North American airlines and airports have said they were confident their safety and computer checks made it safe for them to fly to most destinations on New Year's Day.

In Asia national carrier Vietnam Airlines has cancelled all its flights just before the start of the year 2000 to ensure there are no millennium bug complications, while Indonesia's PT Garuda has indicated it might not fly on New Year's Day.

Officials from several major Western airlines have said they will be flying when the clock strikes midnight on December 31 to allay public fears about flying through the date rollover.

-- M.C. Hicks (mhicks@greenwich.com), July 12, 1999

Answers

http://infoseek.go.com/Content?arn=a1465reuff- 19990712&qt=poland&sv=IS&lk=noframes&col=NX&kt=A&ak=news1486

-- Linkmeister (link@librarian.edu), July 12, 1999.

damn, there goes my trip to that destination point of all destination points, warsaw. what will i do?

-- corrine l (corrine@iwaynet.net), July 12, 1999.

Interesting - the smaller national carriers whose governments are NOT pressurizing the airlines to "declare compliancy" "to allay the public fears about flying through the date rollover" are being "prudent" - but the larger airlines appear to be more worried about the government's fears of public awareness than public safety......

So, note the careful tone of this article. "Prudence" in Vietnam, Indonesia, and Poland is being ridiculed. But "public fears" in the west have to be avoided at all costs to keep up appearances.

All costs = even lives?

-- Robert A Cook, PE (Kennesaw, GA) (cook.r@csaatl.com), July 12, 1999.


And I kept waiting for the punch line!

-- nowayjose (me@ho.me), July 12, 1999.

Bet you won't see Air Force One aloft!

-- (snowleopard6@webtv.net), July 13, 1999.


Moderation questions? read the FAQ