Thursday, November 27, 2014

Messy mix of snow, rain on the menu for Thanksgiving travelers - CNN





  • NEW: 735 flights canceled, over 4,600 delayed, FlightAware.com reports

  • About 46 million people expected to travel for holiday, the most since 2007

  • East Coast travelers get hit by snow

  • Airlines waive rebooking charges for travelers




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(CNN) -- A winter storm is snarling travel across the East Coast on Wednesday, causing trouble on the nation's roadways and delays of up to six hours at airports in the Northeast on one of the busiest travel days of the year.


About 30 million people from the mountains of North Carolina to Maine could be affected by the holiday storm.


"The storm in the Northeast continues to develop and is causing long delays and numerous cancellations at D.C., New York city and Philadelphia airports, along with trouble on the roadways, as snow increases in coverage," CNN senior meteorologist Dave Hennen said. "Most delays and cancellations will occur from late morning through Wednesday evening."


The silver lining for Thursday morning fliers? "By Thanksgiving, the storm will be exiting, and conditions should return to normal," he said.





Storm wreaks havoc on holiday travel




Heavy winter weather slams Northeast








Travelers arrive at Dulles International Airport outside Washington on Wednesday, November 26, one of the busiest travel days of the year. Hundreds of flights were canceled or delayed because of a wintry mix of rain and snow across the East Coast. But the storms are leaving, and conditions should return to normal on Thanksgiving Day.Travelers arrive at Dulles International Airport outside Washington on Wednesday, November 26, one of the busiest travel days of the year. Hundreds of flights were canceled or delayed because of a wintry mix of rain and snow across the East Coast. But the storms are leaving, and conditions should return to normal on Thanksgiving Day.



Emergency personnel work at the scene of an overturned vehicle on Interstate 84 in Vernon, Connecticut, on November 26.Emergency personnel work at the scene of an overturned vehicle on Interstate 84 in Vernon, Connecticut, on November 26.



Travelers wait in the rain to board buses heading south in New York on November 26.Travelers wait in the rain to board buses heading south in New York on November 26.



A passenger waits at Alabama's Montgomery Regional Airport on November 26.A passenger waits at Alabama's Montgomery Regional Airport on November 26.



Passengers wait to board trains at Boston's South Station on November 26. Passengers wait to board trains at Boston's South Station on November 26.



Travelers in Boston wait to meet a family member who is arriving on a delayed flight November 26 at Logan International Airport.Travelers in Boston wait to meet a family member who is arriving on a delayed flight November 26 at Logan International Airport.



Travelers wait for departure announcements at New York's Penn Station on November 26.Travelers wait for departure announcements at New York's Penn Station on November 26.



A plane sits on a rainy tarmac November 26 in Boston.A plane sits on a rainy tarmac November 26 in Boston.



People walk through falling snow at a rest stop in Aberdeen, Maryland, on November 26People walk through falling snow at a rest stop in Aberdeen, Maryland, on November 26




Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel

Weather threatens holiday travel



Photos: Weather threatens holiday travelPhotos: Weather threatens holiday travel



Use CNN's weather tracker


Rain and snow


Travelers are already seeing significant snow accumulations as rain and snow target the Washington, New York and Boston metro areas.


"Roughly 30 miles west of Washington, Philadelphia, New York and Boston will see heavy snow while the cities themselves receive only light amounts," Hennen said.


Up to 18 inches of snow has fallen in parts of West Virginia as of 2 pm ET, and parts of New England could see up to 20 inches of snow. Thundersnow has been reported around Baltimore, parts of New Jersey and the Hudson Valley in New York.


Power outages


Mike Todd, a spokesman for the New Hampshire Department of Safety, said power outages are a major concern.


"This is New England; this is just another winter storm here, and the complication is just that it's the holiday weekend," he said. "We caution individuals to drive carefully and slowly. Consider staying put if you're concerned. Safety first, as always."


Pennsylvania said it'll have state police and the National Guard in the state emergency operations center. State officials urged residents to avoid the roads if they can.


"The bottom line is, the less cars the better, the less traffic the better," said Cory Angell of the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency. "If you don't have to go, you don't need to go. You don't want to be stuck in a queue for hours and then run out of gas and whatnot. It's important people realize there are hazards involved with travel, and more often than not, they don't."


10 ways to survive holiday travel


Flights canceled


Airlines had canceled 735 flights and had 4,647 delays "within, into, or out of the United States" as of 9 p.m. ET Wednesday, and that number is expected to increase, according to FlightAware.com. (That website does not distinguish whether flights are canceled or delayed for mechanical, weather or other reasons.)


"This is not a huge number of cancellations, but due to the holiday, flights will be more full, and there will be fewer available seats to accommodate displaced passengers from canceled flights," FlightAware.com's Daniel Baker wrote in an email.


"We expect thousands of delays that will cause moderate disruption to Thanksgiving travelers," he said. "The delays will begin accumulating early afternoon as the worst of the weather impacts the Northeast and will continue to cascade through the evening."


The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates major airports in both states, estimates that 1% of flights will be canceled at New York's LaGuardia Airport today, 8% at New Jersey's Newark Liberty International Airport and hardly any cancellations at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport.


Fliers should try to rebook their flights for Thursday, Baker said.


United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, JetBlue and Southwest Airlines are waiving rebooking charges for holiday travelers in the Northeast.


"Customers ticketed on American Airlines, American Eagle or US Airways or US Airways Express flights on November 26 to, from, or through (18 affected airports) may change flights without penalty, have the ticket-reissue charge waived for one ticket change, and begin travel as early as November 25 or as late as November 27 under American's current travel waiver," according to an airline release.


Midwest affected, too


The Northeast isn't the only region where bad weather is predicted. Light snow is forecast until Thursday in Minneapolis, Chicago and other parts of the upper Midwest. The Northwest is expecting rain, with snow in the mountains. Denver is expecting wind gusts of up to 30 mph on Tuesday and 15 mph on Wednesday.


AAA is expecting 46 million Americans to travel 50 miles or more from home during the Thanksgiving weekend, and 90% of them are traveling by car. That would be the most travelers since 2007.


Drivers should check weather forecasts before setting out on the road, and travelers should also check tire pressure, car batteries and windshield wipers.


On the bright side, people traveling by car will probably pay less for gas than in recent years, AAA says.


The current average price of gasoline in the United States is $2.85 per gallon, 43 cents per gallon lower than the average price at the same time last year.


CNN's Ralph Ellis, Faith Karimi and Greg Botelho contributed to this story.









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