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Three major airports reopen but travellers feel ripple effect of transport chaos across the country. Last Modified: 29 Dec 2010 05:42 GMT | ||
A snow storm that has covered major travel hubs in the northeastern US, continues to freeze travel plans, grounding flights and stranding buses and subway trains across the country. Significant snow levels blanketed Virginia, Philadelphia, and Boston and northern New Jersey and New York, where hundreds of airline passengers were stranded for up to 10 hours on the tarmac at John F Kennedy airport on Tuesday. Ambulances struggled to get patients through unswept streets of New York City - where the storm dumped as much as two feet of snow - and city buses sat abandoned. Airports reopen The three major area airports - JFK, LaGuardia and Newark International in New Jersey - reopened on late on Monday, but the cancellations of over 5,000 flights meant a huge backlog and more delays. In general, US airlines operating domestic flights are not allowed to keep passengers waiting on the tarmac for more than three hours. New York's airports struggled to get flights in and out and some jetliners couldn't even get to the gate. Airlines were dispatching jets to the airport without lining up gate space first, causing back-ups on the ground, according to Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates Kennedy. Vehicles stranded The chaos was also reflected in New York's streets, where hundreds of abandoned city buses and dozens of ambulances still sat in the middle of snow drifts from the storm. Al Jazeera is not responsible for the contents of external websites | ||
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Source: Agencies |
US travel plans frozen by snow
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