*

*
*Planes sailing? Travel misery eases as JFK set to reopen while La
Guardia's runway remains a lake
*

   - *New York governor says he expects services to America's busiest
   international airport to resume shortly*
   - *JFK will be the first, opening on Wednesday to limited flights*
   - *Airline releases pictures showing LaGuardia flooded following
   Superstorm Sandy
   *
   - *It will take days to clear the flight backlog, with 50,000 passengers
   said to be stranded around the world*

* By Daily Mail Reporter
*

* PUBLISHED: 19:12 GMT, 30 October 2012 | UPDATED: 08:46 GMT, 31 October
2012 *

   - *
   
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225368/Hope-travelers-airports-New-York-City-plan-slow-recovery-Hurricane-Sandy.html#comments>
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*

*As thousands of flights were cancelled due to Hurricane Sandy's
devastating visit, New York area passengers remain stranded in airports
with no knowledge of when they might return to their homes and loved ones,
but there is a glimmer of hope as at least one is set to reopen sometime
tomorrow.*

*Airport workers have been carefully removing debris and clearing runways
from John F. Kennedy, LaGuardia and Newark Airports and a few hundred
flights have been cancelled, but not all.*

*In addition, highways and bridges that were closed for Sandy reopened and
some train service resumed allowing some people to escape New York City.*
*[image: Out of action: New York's LaGuardia Airport has been flooded after
Superstorm Sandy lashed the East Coast, bringing strong winds and heavy
rain]*

*Out of action: New York's LaGuardia Airport has been flooded after
Superstorm Sandy lashed the East Coast, bringing strong winds and heavy rain
*
 *[image: Under water: The problems at LaGuardia Airport have contributed
to the cancellation of 15,000 flights after the post-tropical storm]*

*Under water: The problems at LaGuardia Airport have contributed to the
cancellation of 15,000 flights after the post-tropical storm*

*Late Tuesday, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said it was
possible that there would be limited service on Wednesday at John F.
Kennedy International Airport.
*

*There was no indication that LaGuardia and Newark Liberty would offer
service on Wednesday. The three airports handle 300,000 passengers a day.
*

*Nearly 16,000 flights have been canceled since Sunday as a result of the
storm, including 7,791 canceled on Monday, 6,047 on Tuesday and 635 so far
for Wednesday, according to flight tracking service FlightAware.com.
*

*Airlines said they planned to restart service Tuesday at some East Coast
airports, including Boston and Philadelphia. *

*Both Dulles and Reagan National in Washington, D.C., were open during the
storm and airlines are starting to bring personnel and planes back; limited
operations were expected to begin Tuesday afternoon, said Kimberly Gibbs, a
spokeswoman with Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority.*

*‘New York airports are still a question,’ JetBlue spokeswoman Allison
Steinberg said on Tuesday.
*
*[image: La Guardia Airport in Queens, New York standing empty after being
closed due to Hurricane Sandy]*
*
*

* La Guardia Airport in Queens, New York standing empty after being closed
due to Hurricane Sandy*
  *[image: Not a passenger in sight: La Guardia Airport arrivals gates
remain deserted]*

*Not a passenger in sight: La Guardia Airport arrival gates remain deserted*

*‘We are waiting for condition reports from the Port Authority, but we are
ready to deploy our plan to resume operations to JFK, LaGuardia and Newark
tomorrow afternoon.’*

*And even if the airports reopen, travelers' itineraries are likely to be
tangled throughout the week as airlines sort out getting their people,
planes and passengers into position.*

* *

*‘If flights (in the New York area) started to resume as early as tomorrow,
it could be four to five days before we start to see schedules get back to
normal,’ said Jeanenne Tornatore, a senior editor with online travel agency
Orbitz Worldwide. ‘I think it will be into the late weekend.’*

*Most Amtrak service along the busy Northeast corridor remained suspended
for a second day Tuesday, but officials were working to reopen some service
Wednesday.*

*‘We have crews out there right now assessing and making necessary
repairs,’ said Christina Leeds, an Amtrak spokeswoman.*

*United Parcel Service, the world's largest package delivery company, said
it had resumed deliveries to hospitals and clinics in Manhattan and New
Jersey where roads are safe.*

*But delivery remained halted in Washington, D.C., Baltimore and
Philadelphia.
*
*
*
 *[image: Delayed: A traveller on Delta Airlines waits for a flight in
Detroit, Michigan. Thousands of flights have been cancelled at airports
across the US as authorities struggle to deal with the impact of Superstorm
Sandy]*

*Delayed: A traveller on Delta Airlines waits for a flight in Detroit,
Michigan. Thousands of flights have been cancelled at airports across the
US as authorities struggle to deal with the impact of Superstorm Sandy*
 *
*

*UPS is ‘respecting areas where government officials only want emergency
responders out in Delaware, New Jersey, Philly and parts of Maryland and
Virginia,’ spokeswoman Susan Rosenberg said.*

*FedEx Corp said it was working to resume service on Wednesday in affected
areas, but that hub airport closures and storm debris would affect service.
‘If you're at a house blockaded by fallen trees, we won't be able to get to
it,’ said Scott Fiedler, a spokesman.*

*In New York, workers from the Port Authority and the Federal Aviation
Administration are assessing damage at major airports, including power
issues, possible damage to structures and other safety checks, the FAA and
the Port Authority said.*

*Airlines needed to bring back planes, which were flown out to avoid the
storm, to resume service.*

*‘We are focused on reopening as quickly as possible. But we will not
compromise safety,’ said Pasquale DiFulco, a spokesman for the Port
Authority. ‘We need to walk the runways and make sure there's no debris.’*

*He declined to estimate when they would reopen. ‘Certainly we would like
to within the next few days seek to resume normal operations,’ he said.
‘But a lot of things are outside our control.’*

*The reopening of New York's transit system will play a large role in
reopening the airports, because many of the workers at security
checkpoints, customs and concessions, and baggage handlers and flight
crews, rely on public transportation to get to work. ‘That's going to be a
key part of the equation,’ DiFulco said.
*
 *[image: Normally busy check-in desks standing empty after cancellations]*

*Normally busy check-in desks standing empty after cancellations*

*New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said it could take four or five days to
restore service on the city transit system, the nation's largest.*

*‘The availability of public transportation will also play into the New
York plan, too - so it remains very, very fluid,’ said JetBlue spokeswoman
Steinberg.*

*About 220 travelers remain stranded at the airports - 100 at John F.
Kennedy and 60 each at Newark Liberty and LaGuardia, DiFulco said. They
were provided with cots and at least one food vendor was required to stay
open 24 hours at each terminal.*

*‘We hate to see anybody stranded,’ DiFulco said. ‘We're providing cots and
water and working on food vouchers. We're doing everything we can to keep
people comfortable.’*

*Meanwhile, flights resumed Tuesday at Stewart International Airport, about
60 miles north of Manhattan, near Newburgh, New York. The first commercial
flight since the storm was expected to arrive around noon Tuesday, DiFulco
said.*

*Railway freight companies also were working to restore service. CSX Corp,
the nation's second-largest publicly traded railway company, said its
network remains closed from Richmond, Virginia, to Albany, New York, and
that it had halted traffic originating on other lines traveling to most
points between Boston and Philadelphia.*

*CSX said it still had a lot of its track to inspect, and that it had found
flooding, downed trees and power outages along the route.*

*‘Our engineering teams are out removing trees, making sure generators are
up against power outages, and reinstalling crossing gates.’*

*Norfolk Southern Corp said it was waiting for floodwater to subside, was
clearing snow in western Virginia and West Virginia, and had a power line
across tracks in Cleveland.*

*Airlines could lose $175 million in revenue from flights canceled because
of the storm, said Michael Boyd, an aviation consultant with Boyd Group
International in Evergreen, Colorado.
*
 *[image: Grounded: American Airlines planes are parked on the tarmac at
Los Angeles International Airport. Some 50,000 stranded passengers are
waiting out the storm across the world]*

*Grounded: American Airlines planes are parked on the tarmac at Los Angeles
International Airport. Some 50,000 stranded passengers are waiting out the
storm across the world*
 *[image: Passing the time: Children Hunter Crosby (left) nine, and Scout
Crosby, eight, play video games as they sit and wait while their parents
try to make alternative travel arrangements at San Francisco International
Airport]*

*Passing the time: Children Hunter Crosby (left) nine, and Scout Crosby,
eight, play video games as they sit and wait while their parents try to
make alternative travel arrangements at San Francisco International Airport*

*‘None of it is life-threatening corporately, but it is significant,’ he
said. *

*Boyd said Delta Air Lines, JetBlue and United would be among the carriers
taking the hardest financial hit. He added that AMR Corp's American
Airlines operates 25 percent of the flights at JFK.*

*‘From the airline perspective, closing your major hubs for several days is
worth of a lot of revenue,’ said Carter Leake, an analyst at BB&T Capital
Markets in Richmond, Virginia.*

*Airlines have high fixed costs and the loss of revenue would likely lower
profits, he added.*

*Philadelphia's airport did not close but Monday flights were canceled. *

*‘We had no damage to the facility, we had no flooding so we were very
fortunate,’ airport spokeswoman Victoria Lupica said on Tuesday.*

*Germany's Lufthansa has an inbound and outbound flight, and cargo carriers
have resumed some operations, she said.*

*Delta Air Lines said it resumed flights to Philadelphia on Tuesday
afternoon.*

*Atlantic City's airport was closed except for military flights, but Spirit
Airlines, the main commercial carrier there, may resume some service later
on Tuesday, said Kevin Rehmann, a spokesman for the South Jersey
Transportation Authority.*

*The area was hard hit as the hurricane came ashore Monday night. ‘*

*'The water is receding but it left behind lots of debris and mud and
dirt,’ he said.*
  *[image: Yet more cancellations announced at La Guardia Airport in
Queens, New York]*

*Yet more cancellations announced at La Guardia Airport in Queens, New York
*
  *[image: Queues: Passengers at Heathrow Airport in London wait with their
luggage as the global travel problems caused by Superstorm Sandy continue]*

*Queues: Passengers at Heathrow Airport in London wait with their luggage
as the global travel problems caused by Superstorm Sandy continue*
*

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*".... I am the KING to my own UNIVERSE that Rule my MIND, BODY and
SOUL!!! ...."
*
**
*- Aga Madjid -*

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