RELATED: Another Major Airline Just Canceled 2,000 Flights—Here’s Why. United Airlines will permanently remove its planes from three small U.S. cities, starting this month. According to The Points Guy, United will no longer provide service to and from Twin Falls’ airport in Idaho starting Nov. 30, making it the first casualty of these cuts. Then on Jan. 3, the airline will drop its service for two South Dakota towns: Pierre and Watertown. These two South Dakota airports are Essential Air Service (EAS) markets, which guarantees air service to small communities by providing subsidies to chosen airlines. SkyWest Airlines, which partners with United Express and operates under United in these two cities, had previously been awarded these subsidies, but their contract ended in April 2021. United has continued to provide service to Pierre and Watertown after the expiration but has now decided to pull out after losing a re-bid on the EAS contacts to Denver Air Connection in October. This new airline’s contract is set through May 31, 2023. “SkyWest flights, operating as United Express in Watertown and Pierre, South Dakota, will end in early January following the Department of Transportation’s (DOT’s) recent decision to not re-bid under the Essential Air Service (EAS) program,” Skywest said in a statement, per The Points Guy. RELATED: United Is Lifting This Major Flight Restriction, Starting Nov. 15. United Express is also terminating one route to and from Joplin, Missouri, according to The Points Guy. While an official date has not been confirmed, the airline will no longer service flights from this city to its hub in Houston, Texas, at some point later this month. This is despite service from Joplin to Houston just starting earlier this year on June 1, per The Joplin Globe. According to SkyWest, a lack of demand has contributed to these cuts. “SkyWest will discontinue … Joplin, Missouri service to Houston later this month. SkyWest-operated United Express service from Joplin to Chicago O’Hare and Denver will continue. We are continually working with our partners to evaluate demand and service levels across our network; customers who are booked beyond these service dates will be contacted for rebooking options,” Skywest explained in a statement to The Points Guy. The cuts don’t stop with SkyWest-based United flights, however. On Nov. 3, Texas A&M University System confirmed in an email press release that United Airlines would be ending flights to Easterwood Airport on Jan. 3, as reported by The Battalion, the university’s student newspaper. Easterwood Airport is located just minutes away from the university’s campus in College Station, Texas, and is owned by the Texas A&M University System.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb United currently runs two separate flights from Easterwood to Houston each day, and once they pull out, Easterwood will only have three flights a day to Dallas-Forth Worth, according to The Battalion. John W. Clanton, president of Easterwood Airport Management, said in the press release that the decision was unexpected, as the airport had seen a significant increase in boarding passengers every month following a decline in travel during the height of the COVID pandemic. System Chancellor John Sharp said the airline’s decision was “devastating” to the university. “We’re doing everything we can to get them to change their mind,” Sharp said in a statement. RELATED: For more travel news delivered straight to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. On Oct. 7, United Airlines said that it will still offer 3,500 daily flights within the U.S. in December of this year, as reported the New York Times. The airline plans to offer 91 percent as many domestic flights in this month as it did in the same month in 2019. According to the news outlet, this is the most flights in any month since the pandemic began. “We’re seeing a lot of pent-up demand in our data and are offering a December schedule that centers on the two things people want most for the holidays: warm sunshine and fresh snow,” Ankit Gupta, vice president of network planning and scheduling at United, told the New York Times. The airline said it expects the following days to be the busiest over the next two months: Nov. 24, Nov. 28, Dec. 23, and Jan. 2. RELATED: Never Do This When Your Flight Is Canceled, Travel Expert Warns.