Cookies & Privacy Sandy Causes Widespread Travel Disruption - Idle Banter - Off Topic - Aviation Forums - Flightglobal Airspace

Sandy Causes Widespread Travel Disruption

Bookmark and Share Skip to the end

rated by 0 users
This post has 0 Replies | 1 Follower

Top 10 Contributor
Male
Captain
flyvertosset Posted: Tue, Oct 30 2012 8:25 AM

Transportation ground to a halt along the US Northeast coast on Monday, stranding air, rail and cruise passengers from as far away as Europe and Asia, as Hurricane Sandy prompted closure of flights, ship, rail and even highway services.

Airlines cancelled more than 11,500 flights for Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, including more than 6,800 for Monday alone, flight-tracking service FlightAware said. The tracking service said it expected that figure to grow as the storm hits.

Philadelphia airport was the hardest hit, with 1,220 cancellations on Monday. The service said the three New York area airports had each cancelled about 1,000 flights for Monday.

New York and Washington area airports remained open even though flights have been cancelled.

The Federal Aviation Authority said air traffic control towers were closed at regional airports: Hartford-Brainard and Groton-New London in Connecticut; Northeast Philadelphia in Pennsylvania; Atlantic City and Trenton, New Jersey; and New Castle, Delaware.

United Continental cancelled 3,700 flights until Wednesday, or about 16 percent of total flights scheduled during that period, a spokesman said.

Delta Air Lines said it cancelled approximately 2,100 flights between Sunday and Tuesday morning.

Transportation consultant George Hamlin estimated that Sandy could cost the airline industry hundreds of millions of dollars. On top of lost flight revenue, airlines likely will have to pay their crews extra if they are stranded away from home base.

"If you cancel a day or two's flights, it may take some people days to get to where they want to go," he said.

CARGO OPERATIONS HIT

The transport woes also hit cargo operations, adding another dimension to the storm's economic toll.

Massive cargo container operations in New York and New Jersey shut down very early Monday, and will stay closed indefinitely, the port authority said, stranding millions of dollars worth of goods arriving for the holiday season.

The cost of the cargo disruptions probably won't be large, said Arthur Hatfield, managing director of equity Research at Raymond James in Memphis, Tenn. While cargo gets backed up it eventually gets delivered. "Nothing disappears," he said.

"The only time we've ever seen a storm that had a lasting or immediate impact on logistics and or freight volumes was Katrina," he added. Sandy is a Category 1 hurricane, he noted. "You've got to remember Katrina was a Category 5 and the storm surge was something they'd never seen."

CSX, the nation's second largest publicly owned rail company, shut its network between Richmond, Virginia, and Albany, New York, early Monday. The closure included Boston and extended as far west as Brunswick, Maryland.

Norfolk Southern said rail traffic from Virginia through New England could be affected by flooding and high winds, and told customers to expect delays of at least 72 hours.

Some freight companies said they would keep working where it was possible. "We're going to be doing operations as long as we possibly can, as far as pickup and delivery goes," said Chris Stanley, spokesman for FedEx, "If we are able to safely move, we will."

United Parcel Service began rerouting packages and planes over the weekend. On Monday it suspended delivery in Delaware, Maryland and Washington, DC, but dispatched delivery trucks in Manhattan, Connecticut, Westchester County, Nassau County and Suffolk County.

In New Jersey, UPS sent out about half of its drivers on Monday, and most drivers continued working in New England. Operations were normal in Pittsburgh, central Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia, except along the coast. UPS said it was planning for significant snow in some areas.

It's "too soon to put any dollars around impacts or to look at any specific sectors," said a UPS spokeswoman.

Amtrak cancelled service along the Northeast corridor for Monday, and nearly all service along the Eastern seaboard.

Carnival cancelled two departures, from Chesapeake Bay and Norfolk, Virginia, because of the storm and shifted departures of other cruise ships.

Hotel reservations desks hummed with calls from the thousands stranded, seeking to either cancel or find accommodation around major cities in the Northeast.

Starwood Hotels, which operates hotels such as Westin, Sheraton and Marriott hotel groups, received numerous calls about New York reservations.

"A lot of people are cancelling," a reservations employee said, but said others are coming because the hotels have power generators.

"People are really just frightened of the storm... they're frightened of water levels and they're frightened of losing power and they want to be somewhere where they're safe," the employee said.
 
Source: Reuters

  Gravity always wins!

 
Page 1 of 1 (1 items) | RSS