海角大神

Air travel still clogged by hurricane Sandy, but some flights resume

With New York's airports closed and thousands of flights cancelled, it will take days for air travel to return to normal after hurricane Sandy. But precautions taken by airlines could ease the process.

Hurricane Sandy largely grounded air travel in the nation's busiest air corridor, and it will take days for travelers to get their plans back on track.

Flooding means it's unclear when New York's LaGuardia Airport will reopen. But as the storm moves inland, limited air travel has resumed in the Northeast.

On Tuesday, for example, Alaska Airlines鈥 morning nonstop from Seattle to Boston was back in action, after being cancelled Monday. While en route, Flight 12 was actually scheduled to land at Boston's Logan Airport a few minutes early.

But many thousands of travelers who were still searching for ways to, from, or through East Coast airports, confronted the following realities:

鈥 Sandy has resulted in over 18,100 flight cancellations so far, including nearly 8,000 on Monday and more than 7,000 on Tuesday.

鈥 The major New York City area airports remain closed with no estimated reopen time.

鈥 Airports in Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Boston were open but operating with limited flights.

鈥 Passengers are reporting wait times of several hours at most airline call centers.

鈥淓very airline is allowing fee-free changes (and refunds in some cases) for itineraries potentially impacted by the storm,鈥 FlightAware said聽in a Tuesday afternoon status report, which contained the flight-cancellation totals.聽鈥淭he best way to make flight changes is on airline websites."鈥

Some passengers have been helped in rebooking by posting Twitter updates about their plight, with a mention of the airline involved.聽Even as airlines work to restore service and rebook passengers, the tally of Sandy-related flight cancellations could grow.

But when the airports do reopen, lessons that airlines learned the hard way from previous storm-induced disruptions to regular service should help the airlines restore service more smoothly and quickly, even if they鈥檙e dealing with a substantial backlog.

"It will probably take until the weekend for things to return to normal," Rob Maruster, chief operating officer of New York-based JetBlue Airways, told the Associated Press.

Taking a page from a new bad-weather playbook, airlines that had been tracking Sandy for days moved quickly to cancel flights in advance, keeping passengers from congregating in terminals (nothing good can come of that), aircraft scattered at other airports out of harms way, and flight crews and airport staff rested and fresh for the resumption of business.

"The last few major storms created such gridlock, and such bad will with their best customers,鈥 airlines 鈥渏ust had to shift their behavior," Kate Hanni, who heads up the passenger advocacy group Flyers Rights, told the AP. "The flying public would rather have their flights pre-cancelled than be sleeping in Chicago on a cot."

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Air travel still clogged by hurricane Sandy, but some flights resume
Read this article in
/USA/2012/1030/Air-travel-still-clogged-by-hurricane-Sandy-but-some-flights-resume
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe