Nov. 22, 2006

Crowds And Storms Vex Holiday Travelers

Delays, Long Lines, Carry-On Confusion At Airports; Flooding Slows Driving In N.C., S.C., Va.

  • Play CBS Video Video The 311 On Flight Restrictions

    Only On The Web: Cynthia Bowers reports from O'Hare airport in Chicago on the busiest travel day of the year. Travel restrictions will slow some down, so the TSA offers some tips via 311.

  • Video Holiday Air Travel Precautions

    Airport official say they are prepared for the busiest air travel day of the year, but they are asking passengers to be prepared as well. Cynthia Bowers reports from O'Hare airport in Chicago.

  • Video Getaway Day Driving Tips

    Nearly 32 million people will be on the roads driving to their holiday destination this Thanksgiving. Robert Sinclair of New York's AAA has driving tips for Getaway Day.

    • Delta Airlines passengers prepare to have their personal items for security scanning at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport Monday, Nov. 20, 2006, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

      Delta Airlines passengers prepare to have their personal items for security scanning at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport Monday, Nov. 20, 2006, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.  (AP /Sun-Sentinel, Omar Vega)

    • Travelers at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport move towards their departure gates November 22, 2006 in Arlington, Virginia.

      Travelers at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport move towards their departure gates November 22, 2006 in Arlington, Virginia.  (Getty Images/Win McNamee)

    • Motor vehicles move north and south along I-495, the Capitol Beltway, on the day before the Thanksgiving holiday November 22, 2006 near Bethesda, Md.

      Motor vehicles move north and south along I-495, the Capitol Beltway, on the day before the Thanksgiving holiday November 22, 2006 near Bethesda, Md.  (Getty Images/Chip Somodevilla)

    • Northwestern University student Mollie Schoenwald, looks thorugh her bags before departing for a family gathering in Texas at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2006.

      Northwestern University student Mollie Schoenwald, looks thorugh her bags before departing for a family gathering in Texas at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2006.  (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

    • A traveler waits in the security line holding a plastic bag with liquid necessities at Reagan National Airport November 21, 2006 in Arlington, Virginia.

      A traveler waits in the security line holding a plastic bag with liquid necessities at Reagan National Airport November 21, 2006 in Arlington, Virginia.  (Getty Images/Mark Wilson)

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  • News Tools U.S. Airport Tracker

    Up-to-the-minute reports on delays and closures.

  • Interactive Turkey Talk

    Learn more about the foods we gobble up on the holiday where we give thanks.

  • Section America Gives Thanks

    Recipes, how to carve a turkey, an interactive map of events and more good stuff to gobble up.

(CBS/AP)  Long lines formed at airports well before daybreak Wednesday, and some drivers in the South saw winter hit the roads early as millions of Americans made the annual dash home for Thanksgiving.

The AAA estimated that 38.3 million people would travel 50 miles or more for Thanksgiving — up a million from last year.

Moderating gas prices may be one reason for the increase, said the automobile association's Robert Sinclair.

Since peaking above $3 per gallon in early August, gasoline pump prices have dropped by around 80 cents per gallon nationwide in the past three months. Wednesday's nationwide average gas price was $2.23 a gallon, according to AAA.

Thanksgiving air travel was expected to surge, too. AAA predicted 4.8 million travelers will fly to their Thanksgiving destination. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey anticipated 1.6 million passengers — about 2 percent more than last year — would pass through LaGuardia, John F. Kennedy International and Newark Liberty International airports.

During the height of the travel weekend, that means there could be as many as 6,000 planes flying over the United States at one time, reports CBS News correspondent Bob Orr.

The biggest challenge so far has been the weather, adds Orr. A storm system is causing delays from Charlotte, N.C., all the way to Boston.

By early afternoon Wednesday, arrivals at LaGuardia and Newark were late an average of an hour due to the storms in other parts of the country, said Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority.

At Boston's Logan International Airport, wait times at security checkpoints were averaging less than 10 minutes and there were no long lines at ticket counters at midday.

Complicating air travel are the new restrictions that are forcing passengers to check more of their luggage, resulting in hundreds of thousands of extra bags being checked — at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport alone, reports CBS News correspondent Cynthia Bowers.

This could translate into more missing luggage. The rate of lost and mishandled bags has doubled in the last year. At O’Hare alone, that means more than 16,000 misplaced bags for Thanksgiving week, reports Bowers.

And many of the passengers traveling this weekend are infrequent ones who are not used to the new rules allowing allow passengers just 3 ounces of a liquid or gel to be carried in a one-quart bag, Bowers adds.

Thanksgiving Cornucopia
Turkey Talk
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The holiday rush comes as Homeland Security Department formally announced Wednesday that virtually all air travelers entering the United States after Jan. 23 will need to show passports — even U.S. citizens. Until now, U.S. citizens, travelers from Canada and Bermuda, and some travelers from Mexico who have special border-crossing cards for frequent visitors were allowed to show other proofs of identification, such as drivers' licenses or birth certificates.

Meanwhile, air travelers faced a potential nightmare when baggage handlers for Northwest Airlines Corp. stopped working in its Detroit and Minneapolis hubs on Wednesday in a dispute over who will clean airplanes, a union official said. A spokesman for Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport says Northwest Airlines baggage handlers are working again after a brief work stoppage that lasted about half an hour. Spokesman Pat Hogan said the stoppage began around noon, but that all the handlers returned to work. He said there's no initial indication that it caused delays or other problems at the airport.

Drivers in parts of North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia faced high winds and flooded roads Wednesday as an early winter storm swept across the South.

The weather slowed traffic between the Carolinas on Interstate 95, one of the main arteries for East Coast travel. Some ferry service along North Carolina's coast was halted on Wednesday due to the storm; the state Department of Transportation said it would likely not resume until Thanksgiving Day.

In Virginia, a tunnel between Norfolk and Portsmouth was shut down because of high water, and high winds prompted operators of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel to limit vehicles crossing the span to cars and pickup trucks.

Motorists along Interstate 40, an east-west highway that spans more than 2,500 miles, were seeing more than just fall colors along the route: State troopers will be posted every 10 miles.

The coordinated effort between state police in the eight states the highway passes through — California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina — is aimed at reducing accidents and fatalities Wednesday and Thursday.

In New York, scores of people packed the train waiting area at Pennsylvania Station by noon, including Sandra Clifton. Her flight last year to Pittsburgh took so long — 27 hours thanks to flight cancellations and delays — that this year she was taking the train to see different relatives outside Philadelphia.

“It broke my mother's heart,” said Clifton, 39. “I love my family. I just can't always get to them.”

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by November 23, 2006 12:57 PM EST
hehehe I can't wait....!!
Reply to this comment
by yatq34 November 23, 2006 2:12 AM EST
38 million people traveling?! Guess the thieves have a lot of homes to ransack!!
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