This holiday season, it's been severe thunderstorms — not snow or ice — that have proven to be main hurdle for the millions of travelers headed to airports.
And more trouble could be brewing.
Stormy weather snarled air traffic on Thursday at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW), the nation's second busiest airport — and also led to mounting delays at nearby Dallas Love Field Airport (DAL) and to the south at Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH).
At DFW, nearly half of all departing flights were delayed Thursday. And more than a fifth of flights were canceled, as a slow-moving storm system fueled multiple ground stops over the course of the day.
Help! Here's what to do if your flight is canceled or delayed
American Airlines, which operates its home base at DFW, was heavily affected by the severe weather, which fueled more than 1,000 flight delays and more than 300 cancellations Thursday, according to data from FlightAware.
Southwest Airlines saw more than 1,600 flights delayed Thursday, with its Dallas and Houston bases hampered by the stormy conditions. United Airlines, which has a hub at IAH, had more than 1,000 flights delayed Thursday, too.
The disruptions came on what was expected to be one of this holiday season's busiest days at U.S. airports. The Transportation Security Administration screened more than 2.7 million passengers Thursday, and an even higher number of travelers could pass through security on both Friday and Sunday.
Between the crowds, weather and a Christmas Eve technology outage at American, it's been a far more turbulent Christmas travel week than what travelers enjoyed over a relatively smooth-sailing Thanksgiving holiday.
While American quickly recovered from Tuesday morning's third-party tech glitch without canceling a single mainline flight (albeit with residual delays), bad weather on both Christmas Eve and on Thursday has complicated operations at its massive DFW hub this week.
So far Friday, operations at the carrier — and at other airlines across the country — seem to be generally back on track.
However, conditions could be dicey again this weekend, the National Weather Service warns. Severe storms are possible in parts of Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama Saturday — and there's a chance messy conditions could affect travel on the East Coast later this weekend.
"Sunday's weather likely causes the most significant impacts for travelers during the weekend, with potential major disruptions for East Coast traffic. Thunderstorms across heavily-used air corridors from Florida to Virginia could cause routing deviations," NOAA national aviation meteorologist Wes Adkins told TPG Friday.
Overall, airlines have enjoyed a far smoother year for
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