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The man who decides when and where your next flight will be going

Kraig Pakulski 0 19 Article rating: No rating

By Francesca Street, CNN

(CNN) — Every time you board a flight, you’re stepping into a matrix — a web of choices that have been made for you weeks, sometimes months, before departure.

Most travelers won’t think about these behind-the-scenes machinations as they squeeze their carry-on into the overhead, slump into their seat and gaze out of the window at the long line of other planes waiting on the taxiway.

But the time you’ll take off, the plane you’ll fly on and even the route you’re taking all come down to decisions often managed by one person, aided by a team of experts.

And in a time of turmoil, when spiking jet fuel prices are prompting many airlines to drastically reduce services, that person’s role becomes even more significant.

Behind the scenes, the chief planning officer — as they’re often known — is a key figure at most major commercial airlines, overseeing teams tasked with managing some of the most intricate aspects of air travel.

“It is an incredibly difficult role, and probably one of the most important roles in an airline,” aviation expert Tony Stanton of Australian consultancy Strategic Air tells CNN Travel.

At British Airways, that person is Neil Chernoff.

“Running an airline is like a very complicated jigsaw,” Chernoff, who oversees network and schedule planning at the UK flag carrier, tells CNN Travel. “You have to make tradeoffs to make sure that this whole jigsaw puzzle comes together and fits.”

Assembling the jigsaw

Months before you board your flight, Chernoff and his team will meet to determine the logistics of your journey — right down to how many, and which class of, seats will be available for you to choose from.

Every few months, they’ll return to these decisions. They reassess which routes are working, which are in decline and — as has been the case for many airlines in the wake of the Iran conflict — which to scrap.

At the heart of these decisions is money. Operating an aircraft is expensive, and unless it’s being put to the best use, a plane will become a drain on profit. For passengers, flying on a near-empty flight is a dream. For airlines, it’s a nightmare.

“It’s my team’s responsibility to make sure that we’re making money off that aircraft or maximizing profits,” says Chernoff, who worked in investment banking before moving into the aviation world 15 years ago.

When there’s a surge in demand, Chernoff’s team reacts quickly. British Airways recently doubled daily flights between London and San Diego and Austin after both routes overperformed.

When routes underperform — perhaps because a flight’s arrival time doesn’t work for travelers connecting to other flights, or a destination falls out of favor — it gets more complicated. The team will examine customer habits and flight data to assess what’s going wrong.

“It really is a complex jigsaw game,” says aviation consultant Stanton. “What works on paper in theory doesn’t necessarily work in the real world.”

Airline chief planning officers will typically liaise with sales teams to keep across vacation trends, which ebb and flow as different destinations light up travelers’ Instagram feeds.

Sometimes a destination or region’s popularity is a flash in the pan, other times it’s more enduring. Post-Covid, says Chernoff, the Caribbean experienced heightened interest among British travelers, and continues to be popular.

The key is trying to get ahead of these trends.

“We’ve definitely seen that leisure travelers want new destinations and want to be able to do something different and explore new markets,” he says. New BA routes between London, Bangkok and Colombo were recently brought on in anticipation of such a wave.

The team will change up aircraft to better accommodate demand.

“If it’s much f

A record-breaking measles outbreak in the US has ended. It may have helped drive a spike in vaccination rates

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating

By Deidre McPhillips, CNN

(CNN) — The measles outbreak in South Carolina — the largest the United States has had in decades — has ended, state health officials announced Monday.

There were nearly 1,000 confirmed cases over about six months, including at least 21 hospitalizations. No new cases associated with the outbreak have been reported in more than 42 days, the state health department said, marking two incubation periods – the time it would take to get sick after being exposed to the virus – without any transmission.

The South Carolina outbreak started in October, contributing to a record-breaking year for measles cases in the US along with the large, deadly outbreak in West Texas. The nation is on track to record even more cases this year, which would again make it the worst year since measles was declared eliminated in the US in 2000 — a status that is now under threat.

Public health experts have largely attributed the rise in measles cases in the US to falling vaccination rates; more than 90% of the cases in South Carolina — and nationwide — have been among people who had not received the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine. The vast majority are children.

But there is a very early signal that MMR vaccination rates may have ticked up among young children in the US.

Some experts say that hearing about multiple large outbreaks and record numbers of measles cases nationwide — and confronting exposures near home — could have encouraged some hesitant parents to vaccinate their kids, and there’s “cautious optimism” about a potential shift in vaccination trends.

Safe, effective vaccines

South Carolina public health leaders say that increasing vaccination coverage played a significant role in helping to get the outbreak under control.

“Vaccination – combined with other opportunities for good, solid public health work – really can be effective, even against some of the most contagious viruses,” Dr. Brannon Traxler, deputy director and chief medical officer with the South Carolina Department of ​Public Health, said at a news briefing Wednesday.

Along with vaccination, aggressive contact tracing, case investigation and quarantine protocols helped “put a fire break ring around” the outbreak as it burned through the susceptible population, Traxler said. But the response cost the state about $2 million.

The MMR vaccine is highly effective. One dose prevents disease about 93% of the time, and two doses raise that protection to 97%.

In South Carolina, tens of thousands of MMR vaccine doses were administered during the outbreak. Doses administered in Spartanburg County, the center of the outbreak, nearly doubled compared to the previous year, and there was a 31% jump statewide year-over-year. Doses administered to children under 4 had a particularly large spike.

One metric from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests that aligns with a broader national trend.

About 97% of 3-year-olds in the US in 2025 had at least one dose of MMR vaccine, compared with 93% of 3-year-olds in 2024, according to data from the CDC’s National Immunization Surveys.

The CDC said in an email to CNN that the increase is “consistent with a return to more typical vaccination patterns” after “disruptions in routine care and increased public distrust due to vaccine m

5 things to know for April 27: Press dinner shooting, Severe weather, King Charles, Iran war, fossil fuel profits

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

By Lauren Kent, CNN

Kenya’s Sabastian Sawe made history on Sunday by becoming the first athlete to run a marathon in under two hours in a competitive race — winning the London Marathon with a jaw-dropping time of 1:59:30. Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa also set a new women’s world record.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Press dinner shooting

The man accused of opening fire at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner on Saturday, Cole Thomas Allen, is expected to be arraigned in federal court later today. Meanwhile, authorities are combing through the 31-year-old shooting suspect’s social media history and a message that he allegedly sent to family members before the attack as they seek to understand a motive. Read more

2⃣ Severe weather

A multi-day severe weather outbreak is entering what could be its most dangerous phase yet as it heads for the Midwest, including much of Illinois and neighboring states. Widespread tornadoes, damaging winds and large hail are expected to threaten nearly 40 million people across the Mississippi Valley and into the lower Ohio Valley today. Read more

3⃣ King Charles

Britain’s King Charles III is set to arrive in Washington today for a state visit with President Donald Trump, during which he will attend events to mark the 250th anniversary of US independence. Unofficially, though, he will be on a charm offensive, as the “special relationship” between the US and the UK faces a tense year. Read more

4⃣ Iran war

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is in Russia today ahead of a meeting with President Vladimir Putin to discuss the conflict with the US, after the diplomat’s visits with key mediators in Pakistan and Oman over the weekend. Araghchi gave a list of Iran’s “red lines” to be conveyed to the US during his trip to Pakistan, Iranian state media reported, which included “nuclear issues and the Strait of Hormuz.” Read more

5⃣ Fossil fuel profits

For every single second that ticks by this year, the world’s biggest fossil fuel companies are on track to make almost $3,000 in profits, according to a new report. That’s about $12,000 by the time you read this sentence. It marks an increase of nearly $37 million per day compared to companies’ 2025 profits, the analysis by the nonprofit Oxfam International found. Read more

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Kinky rubber tables and spikes

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“No espero perdón”: autoridades revisan escritos del profesor sospechoso del tiroteo en la Cena de Corresponsales

Kraig Pakulski 0 11 Article rating: No rating

Por Kristen Holmes, Casey Tolan, Alayna Treene, John Miller, Holmes Lybrand y Kyung Lah, CNN

Un día después de que un hombre abriera fuego en la cena anual de la Asociación de Corresponsales de la Casa Blanca, las autoridades están examinando un mensaje enviado por el sospechoso del tiroteo, tratando de entender qué lo habría llevado de su vida como un respetado maestro de California a convertirse en un aspirante a homicida.

“Permítanme empezar pidiendo disculpas a todos cuya confianza abusé”, dice una nota que, según las autoridades, fue enviada por el sospechoso, Cole Tomas Allen, un hombre de 31 años de Torrance, California, que trabajaba a tiempo parcial como maestro y también desarrollaba videojuegos, según registros públicos.

La nota, que Allen supuestamente envió a familiares antes del ataque, decía que pretendía atacar a funcionarios de la administración y expresaba su enojo político, al tiempo que señalaba: “No espero perdón”.

Allen tenía tendencia a hacer declaraciones radicales a medida que se involucraba en el activismo de izquierda en Los Ángeles, adquiría armas de fuego y comenzaba a practicar regularmente en un campo de tiro, dijo su hermana a las fuerzas del orden, según la Casa Blanca.

En los últimos días, dijeron las autoridades, esas palabras se convirtieron en acción. Subió a un tren en Los Ángeles y viajó a Chicago y luego a la ciudad de Washington, donde se registró en el hotel del centro que albergaba la cena anual, en la que participaba el presidente Donald Trump y a la que asistían otros altos funcionarios de la administración.

Iba armado con una pistola semiautomática calibre .38 y una escopeta calibre 12, dijeron las autoridades a CNN. Y luego, supuestamente, envió a familiares una declaración escrita en la que se autodenominaba el “Asesino Federal Amistoso” (“Friendly Federal Assassin”) y expresaba sentimientos anti-Trump antes de intentar irrumpir más allá de la seguridad afuera de la cena la noche del sábado.

El sospechoso “alcanzó a disparar un par de veces” e hirió a un agente del Servicio Secreto que llevaba un chaleco antibalas antes de ser detenido rápidamente, dijo a CNN el secretario de Justicia interino Todd Blanche, mientras Trump y otros líderes se apresuraban a ponerse a salvo dentro del salón de baile cercano.

Ahora, las autoridades están revisando la declaración que Cole supuestamente envió y su historial en redes sociales —que Trump ha descrito como “anticristiano”—, hablando con familiares y tratando de saber más sobre qué lo llevó a presuntamente llevar a cabo el violento ataque.

“Todavía estamos tratando de entender un motivo. Según nuestra investigación preliminar, sí parece que el sospechoso estaba apuntando a miembros de la administración”, dijo Blanche.

La nota expuso una serie de quejas en términos generales que podrían orientar a las autoridades hacia ese motivo, incluida la indignación por las condiciones en los centros de detención y lo que parece ser una referencia a Trump como un “traidor”.

El sospechoso del ataque está siendo acusado de dos cargos por uso de un arma de fuego y un cargo por agresión a un agente federal con un arma peligrosa, según la fiscal de Estados Unidos para la ciudad de Washington, Jeanine Pirro, quien no lo identificó públicamente. Blanche dijo que el sospechoso no está cooperando con las autoridades.

Allen asistió al Instituto de Tecnología de California (Caltech) entre 2013 y 2017, según su perfil de LinkedIn, donde participó en la organización Christian Fellowship de la escuela y en su Nerf Club. Fotos de Facebook de 2016 también muestran a Allen en eventos de Christian Fellowship en la escuela.

Como estudiante, Allen también apareció en un reportaje de noticias local en 2017 por desarrollar un prototipo de freno de emergencia para sillas de ruedas.

Se graduó en 2017 con un título en ingeniería mecánica, según su per

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