If the eastern half of the United States and southeastern Canada are in your travel plans over the next few days or so, you may want to consider delaying your travel — or, at least, keep yourself updated as to the latest information pertaining to the weather — due to a massive winter weather system which has been bringing snow, ice, sleet, freezing rain, torrential rain, thunderstorms, gusty winds, and frigid air to the regions and affect greater than 110 million people and at least 100 airports in 33 states and eight provinces.
Travel Alert January 2022: Updates on Massive Winter Storm; Another Airline Issues Waivers
Although up to 40 inches of snow is expected to fall in some local areas due to lake effect snow or higher elevations, snow is forecast through Tuesday, January 18, 2022 for the following areas, where as much as:
- 24 inches of snow could fall from extreme northwestern Pennsylvania to extreme southeastern Québec, which includes the cities of Buffalo, Rochester, and Jamestown
- 18 inches of snow could fall from portions of extreme northeastern Georgia all the way to western Maine and southeastern Québec for cities such as Roanoke, Erie, Québec, Pittsburgh, and Syracuse
- One foot of snow could fall from central North Dakota and the southwestern tip of North Carolina all the way to eastern Québec and the northwestern tip of New Brunswick for cities such as Montréal, Des Moines, Harrisburg, Burlington, Charleston, Fargo, and Albany
- Six inches of snow could fall from eastern Saskatchewan, extreme northeastern Georgia, and northern Tennessee all the way to eastern Québec and much of New Brunswick, which includes cities such as Baltimore, Saint Louis, Saint Paul, Knoxville, Manchester, Cincinnati, Worcester, Kansas City, Nashville, Asheville, Omaha, Portland, Minneapolis, and the District of Columbia
- Three inches of snow could fall from extreme northeastern Arkansas all the way to Newfoundland, which includes cities such as New York, Charlotte, Wilmington, Atlanta, Boston, Little Rock, Philadelphia, Richmond, Providence, Toronto, and Hartford can possibly experience being covered with up to three inches of snow.
Additionally, an ice storm is possible from Atlanta to southern central Pennsylvania, with significant ice possible in cities such as Greenville, Durham, Charlotte, Raleigh, and Spartanburg. Ice is typically caused by freezing rain, when rain falls and freezes after it reaches the ground. Black ice — which appears invisible to motorists and poses a threat — on roadways is especially a concern at night.
Expect highways and roadways to be difficult to navigate — if not impassible — in many of the affected areas. Motorists are advised not to drive unless it is absolutely necessary to do so. Greater than 300 vehicle incidents have been reported in the commonwealth of Virginia alone; and fatalities from crashes have been reported in states such as Ohio and North Carolina.
#VSP responds to almost 1,000 traffic crashes & disabled vehicles Sunday across #Virginia. From 12:01 AM to 8 PM, 482 traffic crashes and 486 disabled vehicles. Mostly vehicle damage. No reported traffic deaths. @VaDOT @VDEM (Photo: I64 #Goochland) @GoochlandGovtVA pic.twitter.com/VSfdbdfAcJ
— VA State Police (@VSPPIO) January 17, 2022
TRAFFIC ALERT: At 3:24 PM Sunday (1/16), #VSP responded to crash w/4 tractor-trailers & pickup truck. Northbound #I81 at 127 mm #Montgomery Co. #virginia. Minor injuries. Plz avoid traveling into/thru #Virginia during #winterstormizzy. @VDEM @VaDOTSalem pic.twitter.com/mCZWB7pBpn
— VA State Police (@VSPPIO) January 16, 2022
Atlanta: Deadly crash investigation shuts down several left lanes on I-75/I-85 NB before 10th St. One right lane has reopened but delays remain backing before I-20. #fox5atl pic.twitter.com/iGuDWXO0eT
— SKYFOX Traffic (@SKYFOXTraffic) January 14, 2022
Greater than 200,000 electrical power outages have already been reported in the southeastern United States; and significant damage to both public property and private property may occur in some areas.
Over 200,000 power outages.#poweroutage #Prayers pic.twitter.com/RpSHTMvtA6
— Stardust2021 (@Stardust202120) January 16, 2022
States of emergency were officially declared in Georgia, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina in advance of this massive winter weather system; and winter storm warnings from the National Weather Service have been prompted in at least 19 states to remain in effect into Tuesday, January 18, 2022.
Thunderstorms and rain will be prevalent in the southeastern United States and include such cities as Pensacola, Mobile, Tallahassee, Tampa, Savannah, Miami, Charleston, Orlando, and Jacksonville. Tornadoes have even occurred in Florida as a result of this winter weather system.
Crazy Florida weather today! Take a look at this tornado that moved through Fort Myers, FL this morning. You can even see the power flashes and debris!
Permission: Rob Bloom#FLwx #Florida #Tornado @WeatherBug #FortMyers pic.twitter.com/4etVsk8oIe
— Live Storm Chasers (@LiveStormChaser) January 16, 2022
Peak wind gusts of up to 70 miles per hour are expected in the southern half of Nova Scotia; up to 60 miles per hour along much of the Atlantic coasts of Canada and the United States; and up to 50 miles per hour from extreme northeastern Florida all the way to Prince Edward Island and as far west as eastern Tennessee.
Shelves in many supermarkets in the greater Atlanta metropolitan area were reportedly already bare in anticipation of the winter storm, as people remember when a winter storm paralyzed the region back on Wednesday, January 29, 2014 — and people whose trips would normally 20 minutes consumed greater than eight hours to complete on that day.
@NWSAtlanta @RadarOmega @RyanBeesleyFox5 @Ella__Dorsey @BradNitzWSB @ChrisHolcomb
This is Hwy 441 at the intersection of GA HWY 17 pic.twitter.com/bq933M0Tqi— Bill (Severe Radar Watchers) (@severeweatherw1) January 16, 2022
If you can do so safely, please share any photos or videos of snow like this one. Bonus points if you include roads or driveways or a ruler measuring the snow depth. #gawx https://t.co/NyGekyskr2
— NWS Atlanta (@NWSAtlanta) January 16, 2022
Hundreds of flights have already been canceled in anticipation of this winter weather system, as the unusually cold winter weather is only adding to the tens of thousands of cancellations and delays of flights which have been plaguing airlines in the United States since Christmas Eve on Friday, December 24, 2021.
Flight Waivers, Delays and Cancellations
If you are traveling to or from the eastern half of the United States and southeastern Canada over the next few days or so, expect delays and cancellations of flights. Keep up to date on the latest information pertaining to this winter weather system which may adversely affect your travel plans. Better yet, postponing or canceling your trip might be a better option — no matter which mode of travel you plan on taking.
If you have a flight scheduled, your flight may be delayed or canceled — and you may be eligible for a waiver of a fee to change your itinerary.
Here are ten airlines which have issued travel alerts as a result of this weather system:
- American Airlines has issued travel alerts for 68 airports in 19 states and two provinces for Sunday, January 16, 2022 through Monday, January 17, 2022; and Thursday, January 20, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- Delta Air Lines has issued travel alerts for:
- 20 airports in eight states in the northeastern United States for Sunday, January 16, 2022 through Monday, January 17, 2022; and Thursday, January 20, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- 14 airports in five states in the southeastern United States for Sunday, January 16, 2022 through Monday, January 17, 2022; and Thursday, January 20, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- United Airlines has issued travel alerts for:
- 28 airports in seven states and two provinces for Tuesday, January 18, 2022; and Thursday, January 20, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- 59 airports in 16 states and two provinces for Saturday, January 15, 2022 through Monday, January 17, 2022; and Wednesday, January 19, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- Southwest Airlines has issued travel alerts for:
- Des Moines, Kansas City, Minneapolis and Saint Paul, Omaha, and Saint Louis for Friday, January 14, 2022 through Saturday, January 15, 2022; and Saturday, January 29, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- Nine airports in seven states in the southeastern United States for Saturday, January 15, 2022 through Sunday, January 16, 2022; and Sunday, January 30, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- 19 airports in ten states in the northeastern United States for Sunday, January 16, 2022 through Monday, January 17, 2022; and Monday, January 31, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- JetBlue Airways has issued a travel waiver for all destinations for Tuesday, December 28, 2021 through Monday, January 31, 2022, as all fees for cancellations of flights or changes in itineraries will be waived — reportedly due at least in part to the proactive cancellation of up to 90 flights per day.
- Frontier Airlines has issued travel alerts for seven airports in four states for Monday, January 17, 2022 through Tuesday, January 18, 2022; and Monday, January 31, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- Spirit Airlines has issued travel alerts for:
- Eleven airports in eight states in the northeastern United States for Sunday, January 16, 2022 through Monday, January 17, 2022; and Thursday, January 20, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- Atlanta, Charlotte, Nashville, and Raleigh for Saturday, January 15, 2022 through Monday, January 17, 2022; and Thursday, January 20, 2022 is the last day on which tickets must be reissued and rebooked travel must begin.
- Air Canada has issued travel alerts for:
- 12 airports in four states and four provinces for Sunday, January 16, 2022.
- Five airports in Ontario and Québec for Monday, January 17, 2022.
- WestJet Airways has issued travel alerts for:
- Numerous airports in eastern Canada for Tuesday, January 18, 2022 through Wednesday, January 19, 2022.
- Numerous airports in southern Ontario and southern Québec for Sunday, January 16, 2022 through Tuesday, January 18, 2022.
- Six airports in four provinces for Friday, January 14, 2022 through Sunday, January 16, 2022.
- Porter Airlines has issued travel alerts for Montréal, Ottawa, and Toronto for Sunday, January 16, 2022 and Monday, January 17, 2022.
Final Boarding Call
Expect the cancellations or delays of flights to continue in general until further notice.
Be sure to contact your airline or transportation provider for the latest information pertaining to your travels — if they are adversely affected — and please: travel safely.
Photograph ©2017 by Brian Cohen.