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Posted: 2:57 a.m. Friday, Feb. 8, 2013

Atlanta flights already cancelled as northeast waits for blizzard

Nor’easter prompts flight cancellations for Delta, AirTran, Southwest
Delta Air Lines, AirTran, Southwest and other major carriers serving Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport have canceled flights to the Northeast ahead of an expected winter storm. (John Spink, jspink@ajc.com)Power crews from around the country are in the Northeast restoring service to nearly a million homes and businesses left in the dark from superstorm Sandy a week ago. (Associated Press)

By Jay Black and Richard Sangster

ATLANTA —

Atlanta flights already cancelled as northeast waits for blizzard

If you were hoping to take a nice trip to the Big Apple or New England this weekend, it’s probably not going to happen.

Dozens of Friday flights have already been cancelled from Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport into the northeast ahead of the major blizzard that is about to pound the area.

As of early Friday morning, about 60 Atlanta flights had been cancelled into airports in New York, Newark and Boston, according to airline tracking website FlightAware.

About 30 flights have been cancelled leaving the blizzard zone heading into Atlanta.

Nationwide United Airlines said it has canceled 900 flights for Friday in advance of the storm. Delta Air Lines Inc. canceled 740. American Airlines was scrapping about 200, according to airline tracking website FlightAware.

New England could get smacked with up to two feet of snow, while New York City is under a blizzard warning for as much as a foot or more.

As of late Thursday, 2,134 Friday flights within, into, or out of the U.S. had been cancelled, according to FlightAware. The airports with the most cancellations are Newark Liberty, New York's LaGuardia and JFK and Boston's Logan International in that order.

On Thursday, the biggest weather problems are in Chicago. O'Hare has seen 108 canceled departures.

Airlines issued so-called "weather waivers," allowing passengers flying in the storm-affected areas to change their flight date without paying a change fee.

In recent years airlines have tried to get ahead of big storms by canceling flights in advance rather than crossing their fingers that they could operate in bad weather. Travelers can still face dayslong delays in getting home, but the advanced cancellations generally mean they get more notice and can wait out the storm at home or a hotel, rather than on a cot at the airport.

In addition reservation systems have been programmed to automatically rebook passengers when flights are canceled. And travelers now receive notifications by email, phone or text message.

Information from the AP was used in this report