Airlines have cancelled thousands of flights as a winter storm bears down on the Northeast, bringing high winds and the potential for more than a foot of snow in some areas.
Winter storm warnings were in effect Friday through much of Saturday from Maryland to Maine, according to the National Weather Service.
Carriers cancelled more than 3,000 U.S. flights scheduled for Saturday after more than 1,200 on Friday, according to flight-tracker FlightAware.
Travel disruptions will last into Sunday. Delta Air Lines said Friday that it planned to suspend operations at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, John F. Kennedy International Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport and Boston Logan International Airport from Saturday through Sunday morning “as airfields and ground transportation infrastructure are expected to be impacted.”
Delta cut 307 mainline flights or 13% of its Saturday schedule.
New York-based JetBlue Airways, which also has a major operation out of Boston, cut half of its Saturday schedule, or 418 flights.
At Boston Logan, nearly 600 Saturday flights were cancelled, more than 90% of the schedule. About 90%, or more than 500 flights, were cancelled at LaGuardia and 660 at Kennedy, more than 60% of those scheduled. More than three-quarters Saturday’s schedule to and from Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey was cancelled, or 540 flights.
Regional carrier Republic Airways, which flies for American, United and Delta, cancelled 409 flights, 60% of Saturday’s schedule. American cancelled 446 mainline flights Saturday, or 17%, while United scrubbed 386, about a fifth of what it planned to fly.
Airlines in recent years have cancelled flights sometimes days ahead of big storms to avoid customers and crews being stranded.
Carriers said they would waive fare differences for customers affected by the storm. Most airlines had already removed change fees for standard economy tickets in 2020 when the coronavirus pandemic repeatedly derailed travellers’ plans.
Airlines cut more than 20,000 U.S. flights between Christmas Eve and the first week of the year, when far more people were travelling, due to a combination of bad weather and a surge in Covid infections among crews.
SOURCE: CNBCIMAGE SOURCE: Pixabay