Tens of millions of air travelers,  train passengers and subway and bus riders scrambled to adjust their  routines, work commutes and vacations as transportation networks  gradually scale back operations to minimize disruptions.
Coordinated transportation-related  closures or slowdowns, often seen during winter storms in the Northeast,  were mostly announced on Friday to give travelers enough time to adjust  and ensure they stay away from Irene's fury.
New York's subway system, which  carries 7 million riders daily and operates the largest fleet in the  world, had never closed due to weather. The storied Staten Island Ferry  was to suspend service Saturday night.
"You can listen to the noise of the  elevated train. That's not going to be here this afternoon, and I think  that's the message that people have to start understanding," said New  York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, urging residents in designated evacuation  areas to heed warnings to leave.
Subways were not expected to resume until Monday.Airlines canceled more than 9,000 flights for the weekend and another 250 on Monday, according to the online flight tracking service Flightaware.com.
The Northeast is the most congested  area of U.S. air space, with John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia airports in  New York and Newark airport in New Jersey handling nearly 100 million  domestic and international passengers annually. Disruptions in the  region affect flights elsewhere.
The New York-area airports closed  at noon EDT for arrivals and the last departures were expected during  the evening. Those airports would then be fully closed and would reopen  as post-storm conditions permitted, officials said.
The virtually empty rain- and  wind-swept tarmac at Reagan National in Washington handled sparse  Saturday traffic, usually the lightest day of the week. The nation's  capital was not expecting a head-on hit from the storm.
Posted schedules showed flights only heading west to Detroit,  Milwaukee and other cities. Reagan National, Washington Dulles, and  Baltimore-Washington airports all planned to stay open through the storm  even though airlines were halting service.Airports have backup generators  that are usually reserved for maintaining power at air traffic towers  and for public safety. But expectations were that Washington airports  would be active again Sunday afternoon.
"If it goes through and is all over by late (Sunday) morning or early  afternoon, things should get back on track," said Tara Hamilton,  spokeswoman for Reagan National and Washington Dulles.As at New York airports, airlines moved jetliners to safer areas like Chicago and other Midwest airports.
"We are not keeping any aircraft in Irene's path," said Andrea Huguely, a spokeswoman for American Airlines, a unit of AMR Corp.Other carriers heavily affected include US Airways, Delta Air Lines, and United Airlines.
The Federal Aviation Administration  (FAA) said it was working to protect air traffic towers and other  facilities and equipment from any storm damage. Despite the shutdown of  regular service, some FAA controllers would remain at East Coast  airports to handle any emergency, rescue or military flights.
More than 1 million people  evacuated the New Jersey shore areas via roads over a 24-hour period,  the state's governor, Chris Christie, said.
Christie sharply urged those  remaining at Jersey Shore resorts on Friday to "get the hell off the  beach" and leave the region to avoid the storm.
Maryland planned to close the  180-foot-high Bay Bridge, which spans the Chesapeake Bay and links the  Maryland and Delaware shore with the Washington region, later on  Saturday. Virginia closed the 20-mile Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel  further south.More...

 
 
 
 
 
 8/27/2011 03:29:00 PM
8/27/2011 03:29:00 PM
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