The Daily Courier

U.S. Thanksgivi­ng air-travel rush gets off to a good start

- By The Associated Press

Thanksgivi­ng travellers got help from favourable weather in most of the U.S. on Tuesday, but flight delays piled up at airports around the country by day’s end.

Wet and frigid forecasts threaten to make driving more challengin­g in the next day or two.

By late Tuesday afternoon, fewer than 150 U.S. flights had been cancelled — a low number all things considered. But 3,000 flights were delayed, according to tracking service FlightAwar­e.

The largest number of delays — about 400 — was at Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport, where dense fog slowed the pace of departures and arrivals. Flights going to Boston and Newark, New Jersey, were also more likely to be delayed, according to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. So were flights to San Francisco, where visibility has been reduced due to smoke from the wildfire in Paradise, California.

Driving was difficult in parts of New England. The remnants of a recent snowstorm left messy road conditions across much of the region, and the forecast called for more snow today followed by blustery winds and high temperatur­es in the teens on Thanksgivi­ng Day in northern New England.

Rain, with snow in the higher elevations, could slow traffic today in much of California, Oregon and Washington.

The AAA auto club predicts that 54.3 million Americans will travel at least 50 miles from home between today and Sunday, the highest number since 2005 and about a five per cent increase over last year. AAA says 48 million will drive and 4.7 million will fly.

Looking at a longer, 12-day period, the airline industry trade group Airlines for America predicts that a record 30.6 million people will fly on U.S. carriers, up from 29 million last year. That’s more than 2.5 million per day.

The airline group expects that today will be the second busiest day of the holiday period behind only Sunday, when many travellers will be returning home.

Travellers should prepare for long lines at airport checkpoint­s. The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion expected to screen about 25 million people between Monday and next Monday, an increase of five per cent over last year.

The airline group’s numbers are bigger because its forecast covers an extra day and it counts connecting passengers again, while TSA only counts those people once when they pass the checkpoint.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Children run on a moving walkway on a concourse at Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nalThurgoo­dMarshallA­irport,Tuesday.
The Associated Press Children run on a moving walkway on a concourse at Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nalThurgoo­dMarshallA­irport,Tuesday.

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