Boston, New York bear brunt of cancelled flights

epa04010689 The flight information board at the Jet Blue terminal shows the cancelled or delayed status of flights after Jet Blue Airlines cancelled over 100 flights out of Boston Logan International Airport in Boston, Massachusetts, USA 06 January 2014. Flights with Jet Blue were cancelled or delayed due to the recent snow storm in the north eastern United States and as a result of new Federal Aviation Administration regulations requiring more rest time for commercial pilots.  EPA/CJ GUNTHER

Bloomberg

A wave of cancelled flights is moving north to New York and Boston as the first major winter storm of 2018 threatens to paralyse cities and airports over the next couple of days.
Airlines have scrapped more than 2,100 flights on January 4 so far on top of 558 on January 3, according to FlightAware, an online tracking service. The winter blast is expected to bring snow, ice and freezing temperatures from Florida to Nova Scotia.
“It’s going to be a very challenging day tomorrow in the Northeast due to heavy snows in some areas and strong winds,” said Ross Feinstein, a spokesman for American Airlines Group Inc. “We’re making some proactive cancellations because we know we’ll be forced to cancel some flights tomorrow.”
American Airlines grounded all departures from Boston’s Logan International Airport on January 4, along with all flights by its regional airline partners at New York’s LaGuardia Airport. That includes its LaGuardia shuttle operations to Boston and Ronald Reagan Washington National.
Delta Air Lines Inc. scrubbed more than 400 flights January 3 night and on January 4, as did JetBlue Airways Corp., including 260 at Boston on Thursday.
United Continental Holdings Inc. is grounding some flights at its hub in Newark, New Jersey, and also in Boston. Southwest Airlines Co. canceled 30 flights Wednesday night and nearly 300 on January 4.
Smaller cities to the south also are affected, with Delta suspending daytime flights on Wednesday at Myrtle Beach and Charleston, South Carolina, and until midday on January 4 at Savannah and Brunswick, Georgia. American has nixed
all flights from Bradley International near Hartford, Connecticut, on January 4.
Airlines often cancel flights ahead of massive winter storms or hurricanes to prevent passengers, crew members and aircraft from being stranded at airports.
The Federal Aviation Administration also may delay or shut down flights at airports if the weather gets bad enough.

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