More news on this day
Travelers moving through Palm Beach International Airport on June 13 faced a challenging start to the weekend as ten cancellations and 43 delays involving Republic Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, American Airlines and United disrupted connections to key domestic and regional destinations.
Get the latest news straight to your inbox!

Ripple Effects Across Major U.S. Hubs
Publicly available flight-tracking data for Palm Beach International Airport on Saturday indicated a concentrated wave of schedule disruptions tied to large network carriers and their regional partners. The pattern showed a mix of outright cancellations and rolling departure delays, particularly on routes linking West Palm Beach to Dallas, New York and Atlanta.
These corridors feed some of the country’s busiest hubs, so disruptions at Palm Beach quickly translated into missed connections and rebookings across the national network. Travelers heading to and from Dallas and New York reported extended waits at gates as departure times were repeatedly adjusted, while some services were pulled from the schedule entirely.
Atlanta-bound flights, many operated under Delta Air Lines branding or by affiliated regional carriers, also displayed staggered departure times and longer-than-normal gate holds. Similar issues emerged on services into Orlando, where weather and congestion often combine with downstream operational challenges to slow traffic during peak hours.
Although Palm Beach International itself remained open and operating, the knock-on effects at major hubs meant that disruptions extended well beyond South Florida, affecting passengers whose journeys only briefly touched West Palm Beach on multi‑segment itineraries.
JetBlue, American, United and Delta Among Most Affected
According to multiple live status boards and airline information pages, flights operated by JetBlue, American Airlines, United Airlines and Delta Air Lines represented a significant share of the delayed and canceled movements in and out of Palm Beach International. Several of the day’s interruptions involved services on high-demand links to New York area airports, where separate ground delay programs and thunderstorms have periodically slowed operations in recent days.
JetBlue, which maintains a notable presence in the South Florida to New York market, showed a series of late departures on its Palm Beach services. Some flights to New York were pushed back by more than an hour compared with their original schedules, reducing connection windows for onward evening flights at John F. Kennedy and other New York airports.
American and United itineraries between Palm Beach and their respective hubs saw a similar pattern of disruption, especially on flights tied to Dallas and New York. Travelers on American’s Dallas–Fort Worth services faced cancellations and schedule changes that required rebooking through alternative routings or later departures, while United passengers bound for New York and Chicago encountered a mix of extended taxi times, revised gate assignments and late-arriving aircraft.
Delta’s network felt the strain primarily on routes feeding Atlanta, where weather and volume frequently drive tight spacing between arriving and departing flights. Live tracking data showed multiple Palm Beach–Atlanta segments operating behind schedule, increasing the risk of missed connections for passengers continuing onward to secondary U.S. cities or international destinations.
Regional Carrier Republic Airlines Adds to Bottlenecks
Regional operator Republic Airlines, which flies under the banners of several major U.S. carriers, featured in the disruption tally at Palm Beach through a combination of cancellations and delays. Because Republic-operated flights often function as feeders into larger hub banks, interruptions on these services can magnify problems for travelers trying to reach smaller cities or make tight domestic connections.
When a Republic flight is canceled or significantly delayed, passengers booked onward on mainline American, Delta or United services may lose access to same-day routings, particularly late in the day when alternative options are limited. On Saturday, those impacts were visible for itineraries involving one-stop links from Palm Beach through hubs such as Dallas and New York before continuing to other regions.
Regional jets typically operate on dense schedules with short ground turns, so even minor operational hiccups can cascade into later legs. Flight-monitoring tools showed several Republic-operated segments carrying rolling delays through the afternoon, a pattern that can compress crew duty limits and further constrain recovery options if the disruptions persist into the evening.
Passengers on affected Republic flights were often reprotected onto later departures or rerouted through different hubs, increasing travel times and crowding customer service desks as people sought updated itineraries and overnight arrangements where needed.
Orlando and Marsh Harbour Connections Also Impacted
While the heaviest disruptions were concentrated on trunk routes to Dallas, New York and Atlanta, connections between Palm Beach and Orlando and the regional destination of Marsh Harbour in the Bahamas also experienced knock-on effects. These flights frequently depend on the timely arrival of aircraft and crews from larger hubs, making them vulnerable when earlier segments on the aircraft’s daily rotation run late or are canceled.
Publicly accessible schedules indicated that some Palm Beach–Orlando services operated behind plan, with gate holds attributed to late inbound aircraft and airspace congestion along central Florida corridors. Delays on these shorter legs are particularly disruptive to passengers with tightly timed theme-park or cruise departures, as even modest schedule slips can affect ground transportation and lodging plans.
In the case of Marsh Harbour, disruptions at Palm Beach translated into uncertainty for travelers connecting to and from the Abaco Islands. Limited daily frequencies on many Bahamas routes mean that a single cancellation or severe delay can strand passengers for an extra night on either side of their trip, especially during busy weekends or peak holiday travel periods.
Airlines serving Marsh Harbour from Palm Beach responded by consolidating some passenger loads and adjusting equipment where possible, but capacity constraints made it difficult to fully absorb the surge of rebookings created by the cancellations and delays earlier in the day.
Travelers Confront Missed Connections and Crowded Terminals
The combination of ten cancellations and 43 delays created crowded gate areas and longer lines at customer service counters across Palm Beach International. As revised departure estimates shifted throughout the afternoon and evening, passengers scrambled to adjust hotel reservations, ground transfers and time-sensitive commitments at their destinations.
Reports from travelers indicated that some customers missed connections in Dallas, New York and Atlanta after aircraft from Palm Beach arrived well behind schedule, forcing rebookings onto later flights or, in some cases, travel a day later. Those disruptions were compounded for families and groups seeking to remain on the same itinerary, as remaining seats on alternative flights were often scattered across the cabin.
Travel advice from consumer advocates and federal transportation guidance generally encourages passengers to monitor flight status closely, keep airline apps updated and consider earlier departures on days when storms or high congestion are forecast for major hubs. Saturday’s operational picture at Palm Beach appeared to reinforce that approach, showing how localized disruptions can quickly cascade through interconnected airline networks.
With the summer travel season underway and national statistics continuing to show elevated levels of delays and cancellations compared with pre‑pandemic norms, the experience at Palm Beach International served as another reminder that flexibility and real‑time information remain crucial tools for air travelers navigating crowded skies.