Atlanta Airport Delays
January 11, 2011 by staff · Comments Off on Atlanta Airport Delays
Atlanta Airport Delays, Flights were essentially frozen in and out of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport for days because of snow, and the state of emergency was issued in Georgia.
Parts of Atlanta have received up to five inches of snow, which is very rare for the region.
Four of the five runways at Atlanta airport are open Tuesday morning, but the city roads are still bad, and it was difficult for airport employees to go to work.
“We are told that our flight was canceled, there are no other flights because of weather, and the sooner they could come back to the house is in one day,” said Dave Watkins, whose trip home to Hawaii after visiting Walt Disney World includes a connecting flight in Atlanta. “So we will not be home at night” until tomorrow instead of this afternoon. “Wife of Dave, Satoko, was not too concerned when the couple arrived home. “Unlike him, I did not have to work tomorrow,” she said. But there is a glimmer of relief Tuesday.
AirTran said it plans to resume operations, but with a greatly reduced flight schedule. Six of the nine flights AirTran Tuesday from Orlando were still on schedule by 8 pm
Delta said it would receive four flights to Orlando on Tuesday. However, the airline said it still has at least 1,400 cancellations planned nationally.
Flight delays expected to continue through Tuesday and maybe Wednesday.
The winter storm expected to move up the East Coast, creating problems for passengers getting in and out of airports highest on the east coast later in the week.
Atlanta Traffic
January 11, 2011 by staff · Comments Off on Atlanta Traffic
Atlanta Traffic, (AP) – A girl of 7 years in North Carolina is in critical condition after being struck by a van while sledding.
Sara King was sledding on a hill on the outskirts of Charlotte on Monday when his sled went into the street and was struck by a passing vehicle. A nursing supervisor said she was in surgery Tuesday at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte.
Meanwhile, it could take several days before ice conditions to improve dangerous southern areas affected by a wintry blast that sent cars sliding off the road, emptied grocery shelves and officials were nervously watching lines Electrical and ice-laden tree branches.
Low temperatures should continue to snow and ice on the ground in a region where many cities have only a handful of plow, if any.
This update NEWS. Check back soon for more information. AP story earlier is below.
COLUMBIA, SC (AP) – It could take several days before ice conditions to improve dangerous southern areas affected by a wintry blast that sent cars sliding off the road, emptied grocery shelves and officials had nervously watching ice-laden power lines and tree branches.
Meanwhile, New York was about to face its third snowstorm in less than three weeks, a day after the administration of Mayor Michael Bloomberg has admitted a series of mistakes in its handling of a week- Christmas weekend blizzard and promised immediate changes. The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning on Tuesday evening to Wednesday afternoon, with the heaviest snowfalls expected overnight.
In the south, low temperatures Tuesday were expected to prevent snow and ice on the ground a day after the snow from a few centimeters to more than a foot covered the states of Louisiana to the Carolinas – a region where many cities have only a handful of plow, if any. Freezing rain in some areas added to the misery and area schools remained closed for a second day.
“The road conditions are very difficult at this stage,” Joe Turner, a North Carolina Department of Transportation maintenance engineer in Raleigh, said Tuesday morning. “The roads are very bad. We urge people to stay home. ”
The storm closed most of the towns and villages; many businesses closed, and canceled most flights at the airport in Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International, the world’s busiest. At least nine people were killed in traffic accidents related to weather.
Atlanta area’s normally bustling downtown was almost deserted for the second consecutive day Tuesday. And North and South Carolina, thousands were without electricity.
More than 100 passengers who were trapped in a bus station in downtown Atlanta had sandwiches, blankets and bottled water from a nearby prison.
“It’s better than nothing,” spokesman Curtis police officer said Davenport.
While officials in the South has urged people to stay home if possible, Steve Mesick said it was not an option for him. The 36-year-old had to go to work at a gas station, Columbia, SC.
“You just have to stay on the ice,” Mesick said, laughing as he exited his car and skated on the ice in the parking lot. “Everybody needs gas, and someone needs to be here. ”
The conditions were unlikely to improve. Temperatures should remain below freezing for several days and more snow is expected. This means that the treacherous travel conditions could persist until Wednesday or later.
“The problem here is that they are not used, so that the equipment and the elimination of sanitation and snow removal is not really suited for this kind of situation,” said Tino Grana, 48, New York, who visited Atlanta to sell art at a trade show downtown.
Atlanta, which won 4-7 inches, just eight snowplows. The city hired a fleet of 11 privately owned trucks to help spread the salt and gravel.
The storm system was expected to spread to northern Ohio and could hit the northeast of the snow, tired late in the week.
A number of school districts in Ohio canceled classes until all snow has fallen and the National Weather Service said the snow becomes more intense on Tuesday afternoon.
A snowstorm dumped Christmas more than 2 feet of snow on New York and other parts of the region, Travel Holiday and nearly crippling the closure of large cities. Now, the Big Apple and its suburbs could get 8-14 inches of snow with reduced visibility and wind gusts up to 35 mph, forecasters said. Long Island could get up to 15 inches.
The weather in the Arctic has begun to roll in the South on Sunday, bridges and roads covering with snow, sleet and freezing rain. The governors of Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee declared emergencies.
In Georgia, the storm forced inauguration ceremonies for Governor-elect Nathan Deal be moved inside the Capitol steps of the state. Arkansas officials planned to spend within their inauguration on Tuesday.
Drivers struggled to stay on slippery roads, and roads were littered with abandoned vehicles. Some motorists are left in the middle of the cross to push their cars up ramps covered with ice.
Cities by simply not equipped to deal with this much snow, “said Joel Weems, a worker at the University of Mississippi.
But the latest storm also offered the children – and some adults acting like children – a rare opportunity to play in the snow.
“I try to have a snowball fight with my friend,” said 15-year-old Connor Ormond Columbia, SC, as he trotted to the house of a friend, snowball in hand. “It’s more snow than I’ve ever seen! ”
In Memphis, 21-year Jupson Ronni said the roads were not as bad as she feared they would.
“I love snow, I will not lie,” she said. “I’m really homesick. I’m just sad that I must be an adult and work.”
Contributing to this story were Associated Press writers Dorie Turner, Jason Bronislaw, Ray Henry, Debbie Newby in Atlanta and Greg Schreier, Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Ala., David Brandt and Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Mississippi; Alan Sayre in New Orleans Kristin M. Hall in Nashville, Tenn., and Murray Evans in Oklahoma City.
Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Atlanta Airport
January 10, 2011 by staff · Comments Off on Atlanta Airport
Atlanta Airport, Governor-elect Nathan Deal canceled all around its opening ceremonies tomorrow because of the time scheduled during the winter. (Photo by Susanna Capelouto)
Storm warnings of winter in the South are causing flight cancellations and longer lines at grocery stores in the Atlanta area. Several inches of snow forecast to fall overnight also affect the plans for the inauguration of the new governor of Georgia.
Hundreds of flights in and out of the Atlanta airport have been canceled in anticipation of the storm, which should make the conditions of snow and ice.
Grocery stores have good business people provisions of bread and batteries. And former member of Congress and the Republican governor elected Nathan Deal is scaling back the celebration of his inauguration
We will limit activities on Monday to all activities necessary to the inauguration itself. We cancel all other ceremonies.
These include a prayer service the morning and the Inaugural Ball in the evening. Deal is asking people to stay home and watch his inauguration afternoon on television instead.
Source: http://www.gpb.org/news/2011/01/09/deal-cancels-inaugural-ball
Atlanta Snow
January 10, 2011 by staff · Comments Off on Atlanta Snow
Atlanta Snow, The snow that blanketed Metro Atlanta could remain on the ground for several days because the temperature barely get the freezing point throughout the week, according to Channel 2 Action News meteorologist Karen Minton.
These temperatures bitter “road conditions will not improve quickly, and likely to deteriorate. Freezing rain is falling in some areas, and the Department of Transportation encourages drivers to avoid driving “at least until Tuesday.”
Monday’s high temperature will be about 30. Tuesday’s high is 36, with a slight chance of drizzle in the morning. Then, a freezer will be back.
Minton called to heights of 30 and 32 on Wednesday and Thursday. Morning Thursday will be limited to 13, and there is a chance of flurries.
Friday should be a little warmer, a little above freezing point to 35.
In some parts of the metropolitan area, the snow turned to sleet and freezing rain. Up to a quarter inch of ice accumulation is expected in some areas, “said Minton.
Source: http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta-weather-snow-could-800233.html
Logan Airport
December 26, 2010 by staff · Comments Off on Logan Airport
Logan Airport, Precipitation events and responsibilities of year-end holiday at work or school leaving too little time for shopping gifts, and they end up at the airport, hours of a family reunion, with gifts to buy yet.
Fortunately for them, these days Logan Airport is very similar to a center where the planes coming to land. There are high-end stores for dads who want fussy gadgets fancy frills stores full of scented soaps, soft sweaters and that the mother may well be – you hope.
And the greedy young brothers and sisters or nephews and nieces, there are always stuffed lobster gummies shaped lobster, T-shirts with lobsters on them.
Do workers in the shops at the airport said Thursday that some customers are frantically hunting for last minute gifts.
Walseman Kate, 25, works in L’Occitane, a store in Terminal A, which sells lotions and soaps upscale. She said they see many clients who want to buy something quick while they are racing to theft, and should be fit enough in their small suitcases.
Many customers’ instructions amounted to “I need something that looks good. Box and go there,” she said.
The store sees many men come to buy girlfriends, wives and mothers, often with no idea what products or perfumes for women in their lives, etc…
“I do not know her well,” is a common refrain, said Walseman, “even when they were married 30 years.”
A few yards from Brookstone, 25, resident of Cambridge Eric Lonstein knew what to get one of the women in his life. He had just bought her younger sister a pop-up mini speaker for a digital music player.
Lonstein is Jewish, but his family celebrates both Hanukkah and Christmas. He was headed to a family reunion and said he was almost done shopping for holiday gifts.
“I may be a bit more for my aunt and uncle, but I finished most of it,” he said.
A shop assistant said that the accessories are a big seller iPad this year, but even bigger is a small remote controlled helicopter that still attracts the curious when they demonstrated in the store. The store had sold about 30 between the opening 6:00 and 14 pm on Wednesday. The low gear and go 30 each, or two and 50.
Doug Boutchard, 56, is one of those who stopped to watch the helicopter take off, fly a couple of feet, and crashed in a display of other goods. Boutchard, who lives in Worcester, said he was just looking around the store Brookstone until his flight to Indianapolis, where his brother lives.
“Actually, I did all my Christmas shopping before Halloween,” Boutchard said, “but I take a perverse please look at everybody frothing over the next month and a half.”