More flights arriving late; complaints are on the rise

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WASHINGTON (AP) — More flights on U.S. airlines are running late or getting canceled, and complaints are rising.

WASHINGTON (AP) — More flights on U.S. airlines are running late or getting canceled, and complaints are rising.

The Transportation Department said last week that 76.9 percent of flights arrived on time in May, down from 79.6 percent in April and 79.4 percent in May 2013.

Hawaiian Airlines and Alaska Airlines, which get good weather on many routes, rank best. ExpressJet and Envoy, which fly smaller planes for big airlines, rank last.

The government says the largest airlines canceled 1.9 percent of their U.S. flights in May, nearly double the rate in April and last May.

Four domestic flights — all on United — and one international flight were stuck on the ground longer than federal rules allow.

Fliers filed 1,010 complaints with the government against U.S. airlines, an increase compared to the 720 filed a year earlier.