Nearly 300 Delta passengers found themselves stranded overnight on the tarmac after their planes were rerouted from their original Mexico-Atlanta flight due to bad weather.
The ordeal began Thursday evening (April 10) when two separate Delta flights—one from Mexico City and another from Cabo San Lucas—were diverted from their intended destination, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, due to severe storms.
With fuel running low, both aircraft were forced to land at Montgomery Regional Airport. Not being an international port of entry meant passengers were legally prohibited from deplaning and had to remain inside the aircraft until sunrise.
“We couldn’t even get off the plane,” one frustrated passenger said.
300 Delta passengers had to spend the night on the tarmac after their planes were rerouted due to severe weather

What was supposed to be a 3.5-hour journey stretched into nearly 20 hours and was made more uncomfortable by the airline’s alleged mismanagement of the situation.
“Bad weather is understandable. But it felt like there was no plan. No communication. Just one problem after another,” passenger Alex Alvarez said in an interview.

“So we ended up in Montgomery, which is not an international airport. I guess the law is that if there are no customs at the airport, you are literally stuck on that airplane. So, I just learned that today,” said passenger Lauren Forbes to local media.
Delta Airlines issued an apology and admitted to having fallen short of its customer care standards

According to passengers, Delta offered snacks and sandwiches to waiting passengers, but only after an extended delay. Passengers also reported being unable to properly sleep due to constant announcements by the airline.

“We had pretzels over and over again. I did take a nap—it wasn’t comfortable,” another passenger said.
“People would sleep, but then you were woken up by the announcements, and there was a point where people just said, ‘you know, don’t make the announcement if it’s going to be a lie,’” Forbes recounted.

Political commentator Mike Gallaher, who was a passenger on the flight, posted pictures of the uncomfortable incident and updated his followers throughout the night.
“Total chaos at the airport. Five gate agents overwhelmed. No one here at the Montgomery Airport knows what to do,” he wrote on X.
“In all the years I’ve flown, I’ve never seen anything like this in my life.”

A Delta spokesperson issued a statement apologizing for the experience, saying, “We fell short of how we aspire to serve and care for our customers amid thunderstorms in the Southeast US Thursday evening.”
By mid-morning, new flights were being arranged to take the passengers from Montgomery to Atlanta.
The incident comes almost two months after a Delta Airlines plane ended upside down on a runway after an emergency landing at a Toronto airport, injuring 8 passengers in the process.
“Safe and sound.” Netizens sympathized with the passengers, expressing relief for their safety













