Quantcast
breaking news

Travel Plans at a Standstill as Hurricane Sandy Approaches

By: Jim Avila
Updated: October 29, 2012

As a large section of the nation sits at a standstill as the ferocious storm makes its way up the East Coast, traffic in and out of airports and train stations from North Carolina to Boston has been virtually shut down, and may not be back in service until later this week.

http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/hurricane-sandy-generation-storm-17587177

Nearly 7,000 flights have been cancelled in anticipation of Hurricane Sandy's arrival, most of which are either from, or to, one of the hubs in Sandy's path. These cancellations are creating a ripple effect that is being felt across the entire country, forcing delays as far west as Seattle and San Francisco.

"You prepare, you prepare, you prepare, and then they can change," Kelly Bab, a traveler in Philadelphia, told ABC News.

Hurricane Sandy: Live Storm Tracker

Mary Altaffer/AP Photo
Passengers wait for their flight at LaGuardia... View Full Size
Hurricane Sandy: A Once-in-a-Generation Storm Watch Video
Hurricane Sandy Storm Surge to Cause Flooding Watch Video
Hurricane Sandy Closes Entire Cities Watch Video

The eye of Sandy is forecast to make landfall late Monday night in Atlantic City, N.J., bringing with it life-threatening storm surges and intense winds and rain, all of which will cripple transportation.

The passengers who have become stranded as the storm slowly makes its way north are for the most part taking the delays in stride.

"It's not the airlines' fault, you can't really control the weather," one passenger in San Francisco said. "Just go with the flow."

On Sunday, Jet Blue and United Airlines moved their planes out of the strike zone, where they will remain until Tuesday. But at low-lying airports like New York's LaGuardia and JFK, there is also concern about the storm's surge.

"The thing were going to be watching very, very closely is the flooding and the flood potential here in New York," Jet Blue COO Rob Maruster said. "With these airports basically at sea level, that poses a major risk to us."

Maruster said that the delays at the airport are likely to last through later of this week.

"It'll take us a couple days, probably until at least Thursday, if not Friday, to get back to normal with something this large," he said.

Meanwhile, plans to travel via train have been derailed, as Amtrak has shut down all East Coast service. On a typical day, over 300 trains would be running.

For now, travelers are just going to have to wait.

Comments

Related Content

As the countdown ticks on to tonight's record Powerball drawing, the jackpot has swollen to $600 million, largely due to California's participation in the game, lottery officials said....

Eight explorers-turned-contestants risk their lives in a test of survival, living off the land for two months, while enduring 3,000 miles of Alaska's wildest terrain....

(CNET) Facebook's freshman year as a public company played out like an MTV drama in which Mark Zuckerberg was forced to navigate through an awkward accommodation with the rough-and-tumble world of...

Washing your hands after using the bathroom might be a common practice to stop the spread of germs, but not many women may wash their hands after they put them in their purse. But, according to a by...

Aimee Copeland became a national story last year as she battled back from a flesh-eating infection that robbed her of her left leg, right foot and both hands....

WASHINGTON There's an irony in the Internal Revenue Service's crackdown on conservative groups....

(CBS News) Even geniuses make mistakes, and sometimes those mistakes turn out to be genius in their own right, helping to illuminate some underlying mystery or impacting the way an entire...

(CBS News) The parasite that infects a mosquito with malaria may be behind the bug's affinity for the human scent, a new study published in PLOS ONE on May 15 reveals....

(CBS News) Amid ongoing scrutiny over alleged discrimination in IRS targeting practices, acting commissioner Steven Miller on Friday apologized on behalf the agency for 'the mistakes that we...

Texas Right to Life is working overtime to defeat a measure supporters say would improve state laws governing end-of-life medical decisions. With time running out, the fight over the legislation...

 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Everythinglubbock.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved