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Passengers on TUI flights have been encouraged to bring their own food and drink on board after the airline announced its own meals service would be ‘limited’ in the coming days.
In a statement on its website, TUI said ‘staff shortages’ had led to the cut in services for short and mid-haul flights and it was monitoring the situation.
Long-haul flights will continue to be catered for.
The 15 affected airports are Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Doncaster Sheffield, Dublin, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Exeter, Glasgow, Humberside, Leeds Bradford, Luton, Manchester, Norwich and Teesside.

‘There may be limited food and drinks services available onboard TUI Airways short- and mid-haul flights over the coming days,’ said a TUI spokesman
A TUI spokesman said: ‘We can confirm that unfortunately due to staff shortages with our catering supplier, there may be limited food and drinks services available onboard TUI Airways short- and mid-haul flights over the coming days.
‘Customers may therefore want to bring their own food and soft drinks on board (no alcohol permitted). Any soft drinks over 100ml will need to be purchased after you have passed through security.
‘Please note this disruption does not affect any long-haul flights to Aruba, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Mexico, Orlando and St Lucia and meal services on these flights will continue to operate as normal.
‘Please be assured we are continuously monitoring the situation and working closely with our suppliers to limit the impact to the onboard service for our customers. We are directly contacting all impacted customers.
‘We’re very sorry for any inconvenience caused.’

Ms Mason said the Tui pilot told passengers that they ‘shouldn’t have even been allowed on the plane’ and ‘he thought we had all been put up in hotels that night’. File image of a Tui airplane
The news comes after a difficult month for air passengers, as fellow carriers British Airways and easyJet both canceled hundreds of flights in April but the likes of Virgin Atlantic, Ryanair, Jet2 and TUI have not.
In a single day on April 8, British Airways canceled 68 plans to locations including Athens and Prague, while easyJet stopped 42.
An easyJet spokesman said the firm had experienced ‘higher-than-usual levels of employee sickness and so we have taken the action to cancel some flights in advance’.
BA said: ‘While the vast majority of our flights continue to operate as planned, as a precaution we’ve slightly reduced our schedule between now and the end of May.’
After staff threatened a strike over pay, BA went on to cancel a further 16,000 flights on popular routes until October as it wrestles with staff shortages.
Chief executive Sean Doyle said an average of 60 flights daily – 16,000 in total – will have been axed between March and the autumn – about 10 per cent of all BA flights.
Around 75 per cent of those are short-haul flights to EU hotspots including Spain and Italy.

After staff threatened a strike over pay, BA went on to cancel a further 16,000 flights on popular routes until October as it wrestles with staff shortages
The boss of the aviation regulator subsequently wrote to the airlines and airports to express concern at the level of disruption being suffered by passengers.
Civil Aviation Authority chief executive Richard Moriarty wrote: ‘Instances of late notice cancellations and excessive delays at airports are not just distressing for affected consumers but have the potential to impact confidence levels across the industry, at just the point when passengers are returning to flying. ‘
He went on: ‘We know that you are working hard to recruit these new colleagues, but it is clear that this has not always happened sufficiently quickly to cope with the increased passenger travel in recent days.
‘Given the consequences for passengers of canceled and disrupted journeys I encourage you to do all you can to ensure that you have the necessary level of appropriately-trained and cleared staff resources in place.’
It is ‘very important’ that airlines are setting schedules ‘on a basis that is deliverable given available staff (including contractors), and has resilience for staff sickness, including from Covid,’ Mr Moriarty added.

An easyJet spokesman said the firm had experienced ‘higher-than-usual levels of employee sickness’ after hundreds of canceled flights last month
TUI found itself in the headlines last week after a family was left waiting for 14 hours at a Cyprus airport.
Lisa Mason and her children were due to fly back to Manchester after enjoying their first holiday since the pandemic.
On arriving at Larnaca airport, they boarded the flight an hour late after being told by Tui that it had been delayed.
Passengers were then left waiting for three hours on board the grounded plane before being herded back into the airport and left in the departure lounge.
Ms Mason, from Wolstanton near Newcastle Under Lyme, branded the situation a ‘shambles’ and says it has ‘completely taken the shine off’ the family’s first holiday since the pandemic.
TUI has been contacted for comment.
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George Holan is chief editor at Plainsmen Post and has articles published in many notable publications in the last decade.