10:23 AM Weather, flights aid post-Thanksgiving travel efforts | ||||
#travel flights # Weather, flights aid post-Thanksgiving travel effortsFILE - In this Nov. 25, 2015 file photo, people move about Grand Central Station in New York. According to AAA, 42 million traveled somewhere to celebrate Thanksgiving. Tens of millions of Americans returning home after the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend Sunday have cooperative weather and mostly efficient airport operations to thank for smooth traveling conditions. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, File) NEW YORK (AP) — Tens of millions of Americans returning home after the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend Sunday had cooperative weather and mostly efficient airport operations to thank for smooth traveling conditions. Other than a winter storm that is bringing freezing rain and snow to the central Plains Sunday night and into Monday, and flood warnings in northern Texas and Arkansas, weather across much of the country is seasonably mild, said National Weather Service meteorologist Bruce Sullivan. Enjoy it while it lasts, he said. Most airports across the country were running with delays of 15 minutes or less Sunday night, according to Federal Aviation Administration air traffic control system data. But a large volume of passengers at Seattle-Tacoma International in Washington, Newark International in New Jersey and LaGuardia in New York, led to slightly longer delays, the data show. Seattle-Tacoma International Airport spokesman Peter McGraw said six planes were diverted to other airports during the evening because of low visibility caused by fog. Arrivals and departures have since become normal. In Atlanta, officials are projecting 88,000 travelers to pass through the world s busiest airport by the end of Sunday, making it their busiest day so far this year. A spokesman for Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport says the previous record for the year was 80,000 people on Columbus Day. Lobbying group Airlines for America estimated more than 25 million passengers would take to the sky on U.S. airlines during the 12 days surrounding Thanksgiving. And the motoring group AAA estimated that nearly 47 million Americans were expected to travel at least 50 miles from home via car, plane or bus over the weekend — the highest number since 2007. At Pennsylvania Station in New York City, college junior Seth Greenspan said the normally chaotic transit hub appeared strangely calm as he awaited an Amtrak train back to the College of William Mary in Virginia after spending Thanksgiving on Long Island. Amtrak itself can be unreliable, whether or not it s a holiday, he said ahead of an eight-hour trip. So far it seems OK. Toni Baines and her husband, Marlon, who spent Thanksgiving in the Bronx and were head back to their home in Richmond, Virginia, said it appeared transit officials anticipated an influx of travelers and planned accordingly. They ve been running a lot of extra trains, she said. So far we haven t had any problems. Highway patrols and state transit officials across the country advised drivers to budget extra time, particularly during the peak travel hours of 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in anticipation of heavy volume of cars on the road. In New Jersey — home to the heavily traveled New Jersey Turnpike and Garden State Parkway — traffic was moving smoothly, though some congestion was reported. Things seem to be going well so far, state police Sgt. Jeff Flynn said. In California, transportation officials reported only some fender benders slowing traffic. Caltrans spokeswoman Lauren Wonder said people may have chosen to return from Thanksgiving trips on Saturday — as she did — leaving Sunday as a free day before work. She also suggested people may have decided to stay home for what she called a stay-turkey-cation. In Virginia, a chartered bus carrying 51 people, most of them college students, overturned near Richmond on Sunday evening. One person was seriously injured and 34 others suffered minor injuries. The students later were picked up to be driven back to the University of Virginia, Virginia Tech and Radford University.
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