Truro News

FBI involved with airport blackout probe

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The FBI has joined the probe into what caused a fire that knocked out power to the world’s busiest airport in Atlanta, but an agency spokesman said Tuesday there was no sign of anything connected to terrorism.

“There’s no indication at this point of anything nefarious,” FBI spokesman Kevin Rowson said.

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has also been involved in the investigat­ion, Georgia Power spokesman Craig Bell said.

“We’re bringing everything we have to bear to the situation to make sure this doesn’t happen again,” Bell said Tuesday.

No conclusion­s have been drawn as to the cause of the fire, which took out the airport’s power supply and also its backup electricit­y for about 11 hours Sunday. The blackout stranded thousands of passengers on grounded jets and in darkened concourses and led to the cancellati­on of more than 1,500 flights just ahead of the frenzied holiday travel period.

Hartsfield- Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport, the main hub for Delta Air Lines, is a crucial cog in the nation’s air travel system. Delays there typically ripple across the nation because so many U.S. and internatio­nal flights are routed through the Atlanta hub.

Because of the magnitude of Sunday’s outage, “we want to be able to rule out any possible scenario that wasn’t equipment malfunctio­n,” Bell said.

“We really don’t expect any answers like that to come forth for a few days,” he said.

The power company is working with the airport to explore how to prevent the situation from happening again.

Among ideas being discussed: Encasing in concrete the area that holds key electric equipment, or moving parts of the system to other areas. The blaze took out the main power and the backup system because the fire burned through parts of both in the same undergroun­d utility tunnel, authoritie­s have said.

Delta and other carriers said they expected to be running normally Tuesday. But passengers trying to catch Tuesday morning flights faced wait times of up to an hour just to get through the main security checkpoint in the domestic terminal, the airport’s website showed.

No matter how fast Delta and other airlines move, it will take a few days to get the hundreds of thousands of grounded passengers to their final destinatio­ns, said Robert Mann, president of an airline consulting firm in Port Washington, New York. In rare cases, some passengers won’t arrive until Thursday, he said.

Hartsfield-jackson serves an average of 275,000 passengers a day. Nearly 2,500 planes arrive and depart each day.

On Tuesday, passengers were still sleeping in the atrium area that’s often used for events aimed at showcasing the world’s busiest airport. Video from news outlets showed passengers sprawled out on benches and chairs, and luggage piled up in a nearby area of the domestic terminal.

Mann said the rebooking of passengers was probably complicate­d by the large number of inexperien­ced travellers this time of year.

“They’re more elderly, they’re more young people, they’re more infrequent travellers,” he said. “All these folks are going to require a lot of face time, a lot of hand-holding.”

 ?? Ap photo ?? Passengers rest behind the ticket counter after the lights went out at Hartfield-jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport.
Ap photo Passengers rest behind the ticket counter after the lights went out at Hartfield-jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport.

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