Rain, fog delay holiday travelers’ trips home
East Coast passengers hindered, but things run smoothly in rest of country
Video |
Travel wasn't a holiday nightmare Nov. 26: This Thanksgiving, the air travel nightmare (mostly) didn't happen. NBC's Tom Costello asks, why shouldn't flying always be this easy? Nightly News |
Travel Detective Peter Greenberg | More |
Special feature |
50 reasons to love the U.S.A From Alaska to Maine, there is so much to explore in America. Here are 50 reasons to pack your bags and discover some hidden treasures. |
INTERACTIVE |
NEW YORK - The long Thanksgiving weekend got a bit longer Monday for some people trying to leave the nation’s largest city, where rain and poor visibility delayed some flights for hours.
Still, much of the rest of the country enjoyed good weather and few flight delays, and a feared ripple effect from delays on the rainy East Coast apparently never transpired.
That was little comfort to travelers stuck in New York.
“I thought this would be an easier travel day,” said 12-year-old Maria Burgos, who was trying to fly home to Miami on Monday instead of Sunday after spending the holiday with her grandmother and aunt in the Bronx.
According to the Federal Aviation Administration, arrivals at LaGuardia were delayed three hours throughout much of the day. There were two-hour delays at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey and one-hour delays at Kennedy International Airport.
Thirty flights at LaGuardia were canceled, said Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates New York City-area airports.
At LaGuardia, the monitors showed a steady stream of canceled and delayed flights.
Amy Ma, a freshman at the University of Notre Dame, was trying to get back to Indiana by way of Chicago when she looked up at the board and saw that her flight had been canceled.
“I panicked,” she said. “But then my dad and I went to the agent and she booked us on another flight, which was good. But now that flight is delayed two hours.”
Much of the rest of the country enjoyed good weather and few flight delays.
The FAA reported delays of 15 minutes or less at Los Angeles International Airport, at Chicago Midway Airport, at Washington Dulles Airport and at other major airports. There were delays, blamed on rain and fog, at Logan International in Boston and at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
In Atlanta, about 25 percent of flights experienced at least short delays.
|
According to an AAA estimate made before the holiday, a record 38.7 million U.S. residents were expected to travel 50 miles or more between Wednesday and Sunday, up about 1.5 percent from last year.
Click for related content |
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
- Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM TRAVEL |
| Add Travel headlines to your news reader: |







