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Archive for December 22nd, 2011

Winter storm wreaks travel havoc in Colorado Dec 22

By Joshua A. Bickel, AP

A snowplow clears roads in Casper, Wyo., on Wednesday. The snowstorm moved into Colorado overnight and early Thursday.

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Snow and rain expected to cause holiday travel delays Dec 22

Reuters

10:32 a.m. CST, December 22, 2011

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Busy holiday travel day may cause delays Dec 22


It was a very soggy start to the holiday travel rush. At least 7.5 million Texans are traveling over the next 11 days.

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We checked the crowds at Hobby and Bush Airports and while it was busy with bustle of the holiday season, everything appeared to be moving smoothly.

“Toys, baby gifts,” said passenger Kelly Owen.

With an oversized duffle bag full of Christmas presents, the Owen family is heading home for the holidays. They are among thousands of passengers who will board planes at Houston airports today.

“Myself, my husband, our nine-month-old Grayson, my sister-in-law Kendall,” said Owen.

Tens of thousands of people will fly out of Hobby Airport. Not to mention thousands more at the big airport, as today starts the busiest travel days of the year.

“This is the first time I have flown during Christmas,” said traveler Kathy Gibson. “It’s an experience.”

“We are traveling with a baby for the first time and it’s been good,” said passenger Jay Barnett.

With rainy conditions in the south and snow and ice causing problems in the north, some travelers are feeling the affects from delays. For passengers like Barnett, its the longer lines that have caused a slight setback.

“I got here and hour early and I missed my flight and now I’m on standby,” said Barnett.

Airport officials say passengers should brace themselves for crowded airports and advise against wrapping gifts before going through checkpoints.

Airport officials are still advising travelers to get there early. And here’s something to keep in mind if you’re headed to Hobby. The roadway leading to the airport’s ticketing level is under construction. Traffic is being diverted to the parking garage.

The Houston Airport System expects to see more than 2.1 million passengers going through Bush Airport during the holiday season. The busiest days there are Thursday and Friday. At Hobby Airport, nearly 280,000 passengers are expected to fly out and the busiest days there are expected to be today, Friday, Monday and Tuesday.

For all your holiday travel needs, make sure to check our holiday travel guide. You’ll find the latest status on flights, road conditions, weather anywhere and more.

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Austerity strikes hit Europe holiday travel _ trains idled, flights delayed … Dec 22

Eurostar and Thalys idled part of their popular service through Brussels as Belgian transport workers walked off the job. In France, a strike by airport security personnel stretched into its seventh day, and in London, football club Arsenal postponed its day-after-Christmas game against Wolverhampton Wanderers by 24 hours because of a planned public transport strike on the U.K.’s Boxing Day holiday.

The French government, anxious to avoid angering voters ahead of next spring’s presidential election, was looking at options to get police to replace security personnel and make sure Christmas Sunday is as undisturbed as possible. Delays appeared to be shortening.

“The issue is to have airplanes take off so that the French people who have had a tough autumn and are feeling the crisis can get to their families and not be blocked at airports,” Transport Minister Nathalie Koscusko-Morizet said on France Info.

In the Netherlands, doctors got in on the act, with about one in six holding a three-hour wildcat strike after Parliament approved plans to reduce their reimbursement for many common procedures. Doctors who participated said they were only available in case of emergency.

In Greece, train workers planned a five-hour work stoppage from noon Thursday, and in Spain more airline and transport action is expected next week, with Iberia pilots to strike again Dec. 29 over the state company’s decision to launch a low cost airline. Meanwhile, the small CGT union has called strikes at the public rail company Renfe for Christmas and New Year’s.

Portuguese unions, too, are biting back after a €78-billion ($102-billion) international bailout earlier this year brought tax hikes and pay cuts in return. Train engineers are due to strike from Friday until Christmas day, protesting disciplinary measures imposed on them by the national rail company for allegedly failing to ensure minimum services during a recent general strike over the cuts.

The major unions in Belgium were protesting pension reform being pushed through Parliament for early next year that would require people to wait two years longer before early retirement. All but one of Belgium’s major airports were operating close to normally, but intermittent road blocks by strikers worsened road delays around the capital. The strike also affected postal services, schools and hospitals.

At the Brussels South train station, the tracks of the popular Eurostar and Thalys trains linking London and Paris through Brussels with Amsterdam and Germany, remained empty.

“Eurostar and other onward connecting rail services will not be able to operate to or from Brussels during this period,” the rail company said of the 24-hour strike.

Simply waiting a day would be tough for holiday travelers since the trains are often fully booked for days on end. All local lines were canceled on Thursday, too, keeping many workers home.

“Again, it is at the expense of travelers. We are literally left out in the cold,” said Kees Smilde of the TrainTramBus consumer group.

Unions were especially irked that the government is trying to push through pension reform, sidestepping the traditional worker-employer negotiations that have become a cornerstone of the nation’s welfare state system.

Workers “are striking against the government retirement measures because they are imposed on us in the absence of any kind of social negotiations,” the Socialist ABVV union said in a statement. Another day of action is planned for Jan. 30, when a summit of EU government leaders is planned, and further wildcat strikes are expected.

In London, Arsenal was forced to take action after subway workers decided to stage a strike the day after Christmas in a dispute over holiday pay, a walkout sure to cause problems on one of the busiest shopping days of the year. The London Underground’s management calls the unions’ demand for more pay and another day off “outrageous.”

In Paris, the airport security personnel strike continued but delays were shortening and no flight cancellations were recorded at De Gaulle, Paris’ busiest airport Wednesday.

Unions representing workers who conduct pat-downs on travelers and operate the bag-screening machines launched the walkout a week ago to demand negotiations over an increase in pay. It was timed for maximum effect during the holiday getaway season.

______

Greg Keller from Paris, Elena Becatoros from Athens, Toby Sterling from Amsterdam, Barry Hatton from Lisbon and Ciaran Giles from Madrid contributed to this story.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Airports jammed today, busy holiday travel underway Dec 22


Airports jammed today, busy holiday travel underway

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Written by Randol White

LOS ANGELES (EDE) — The nation’s largest airports are reporting that today and tomorrow, December 22 and 23, is expected to be the busiest travel day of the 2011 holiday season.

The Chicago Department of Aviation anticipates an estimated 2.7 million passengers will travel through the city’s airports during this holiday period, with an estimated 202,600 passengers at O’hare today. Midway’s busiest day is expected tomorrow. Snow showers are expected this evening with sunshine and 36 degrees for the high tomorrow in Chicago.

Passenger volume at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) will likely remain unchanged this holiday travel period with 2.9 million passengers, the same volume reported in 2010. Again, today is predicted to be one of the busiest days, also tomorrow and next Thursday and Friday, according to airport officials. Weather is not expected to be a problem this weekend.

Anaheim, home to Disneyland and Knott’s Berry Farm, is the second most popular travel destination this year, according to AAA.

Today and tomorrow are expected to be the busiest travels days at Denver International Airport, where a major winter storm just dumped up to 10 inches of snow overnight. Some areas west of Denver in the foothills saw 2 feet of new snow.

“Last year we experienced the busiest December holiday week in the airport’s history with more than 1.1 million passengers traveling through DIA,” said Dan Melfi, DIA holiday spokesperson. “We were fortunate to have favorable weather conditions last year and this past Thanksgiving, which made for smooth traveling.

Because of the recent snow storm, Melfi said the airport’s staff , “cannot overemphasize the importance of planning ahead and allowing extra travel time to navigate the airport at this time of year.”

Weather in the Southeast could hamper flights as severe thunderstorms are forecast today. Tomorrow is predicted to be the busiest day at Orlando International Airport in Florida, the top travel destination this season according to AAA.

Rain and snow are forecast for portions of the Northeast, with rain tonight and tomorrow in Boston. Logan International Airport was not experiencing any flight delays at press time, but Newark was showing flights delayed up to 30 minutes due to heavy volume.


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Ideas for Travel Junkies Dec 22
  • tenthammock

    Lawson Hammock

Looking for some great last-minute gifts for the travel junkie on your list?

Spread some cheer and goodwill with our picks for travel gadgets sure to enhance every journey. Whether they’re exploring the back country of Siberia or road-tripping with the family, here are a few goodies to help them stay fueled up, stress-free and one step ahead of the ­­inevitable hassles of travel. 

But, a heads-up: These gifts are so cool, you just might find yourself buying one for yourself.  

Powerbag battery-charging backpack: While there are other battery-charging bags on the market, this rugged backpack is slimmer, lighter and loaded with thoughtful extras. The “fūl” charging system has connections for up to four mobile devices simultaneously, automatically detecting which one needs powering up first. The padded laptop and tablet pockets keep your gear protected, while its waterproof AC adapter is tucked neatly into a side pocket that also fits the smaller gadgets while they get juiced. Bonus: It comes charged and ready to go. From $139; various retail outlets and MyPowerbag.com.

EcoQue portable grill: This nifty little grill is so efficient and easy to use that it just might replace that under-used behemoth on your back porch. The company claims you’ll save up to 75 percent on fuel compared to grills of similar size – just nine briquettes for a four-person meal. No briquettes? No problem – the patented pyramid design works just as well with twigs and sticks. Made of easy-to-clean stainless steel, EcoQue comes in both 12” and 15” sizes, and packs down to an impressive one-inch thickness for easy transport. (Our only gripe: The fitted foil liners aren’t included, but you’ll want to use them.) From $129

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House of Marley in-ear speakers: The only foreseeable drawback to these über-cool earphones: Constantly removing them to field inquiries from envious fellow travelers. The latest offering from The House of Marley, the family organization of late reggae king Bob Marley, three collections of audio products, including the Zion in-ear earphones, shown here in Mist, seamlessly blend style and substance, with wooden accents and braided, tangle-free fabric cords (in Jamaica’s national colors, no less), and quality sound that far outperforms their plastic-and-rubber counterparts. Plus, they’re made with sustainable products and packaging, and 5 percent of the company’s proceeds go toward 1Love.org, a charity focused on global unity and the environment. Yeah, mon, indeed. From $29.99, available here and here.

Shelves To Go: Hotel room dressers might very well become obsolete with this clever device, which cuts the unavoidable task of packing and unpacking to mere seconds. Initially developed for flight attendants, the product has become popular with the road warrior set – especially the germ-phobes skittish about dusty drawers in hotel rooms. Shelves to Go come in 18- and 20-inch sizes (the latter of which easily fits into most carry-ons) and hold 35 pounds worth of stuff. Finally, we’re one step closer to having a suitcase pack itself. $35

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Backtrack D-Tour GPS, Bushnell: Sure, phone apps and maps are great, but they’re not very useful when you’re hiking through serious backcountry with no cell coverage or a clue which way to go at the fork in the trail. This user-friendly GPS comes to the rescue with no-fuss functionality (a push of a button sets up to five locations, such as the trailhead or your car in a palatial parking lot, and a digital compass that points you in the right direction) and some handy extras (altimeter, speedometer and temperature gauge). At home, upload your data for an impressive display of your exact route, altitude gain, distance and speed. The D-Tour, a lightweight six ounces that easily fits into your palm, also makes a perfect navigation tool for on-the-go-runners to explore unfamiliar cities and routes. From $119 

Travel-Tot Travel Childproofing Kit: As parents are well aware, the stress of traveling with young children doesn’t end when you arrive. Head off bumps, bruises and nastier mishaps in homes away from home with this award-winning baby-proofing kit, which easily transforms a hotel room or Grandma’s house into a safer spot for your little ones in about five minutes. The easily packable kit comes complete with corner, outlet and doorknob covers, plus a cabinet lock, cord-wind up and other assorted gadgets. We’re definitely doing the safety dance for this one. $25

Blue Ridge Camping Hammock: It’s been on the market for a while, but this über-cool hammock – which is essentially a tent strung between two trees – is now patent-pending for its unique design. Designed by Lawson Hammock, the single-person BRCH keeps campers suspended above rocky or steep terrain, dry from the rain, bug-free and, unlike many camping hammocks, not feeling like the filler in a soft-shell taco. Its arched-pole, spreader-bar system enables a good-night’s sleep even when rough ground suggests otherwise, but if you want to sleep on the ground it’s easily staked out as a bivy tent, too. Plus, it weighs only four pounds, including its rain fly and condensation-preventing netting, and packs neatly down to 24”x6”x6”. $139.99

Solio Bolt: This adorable, planet-friendly charger juices up most small hand-held devices, like phones, GPSs or MP3 players, on 8-10 hours of sunlight, and its backup battery holds two full charges for most cell phones. On cloudy days (or from your hotel room), skip the solar and simply charge it from an outlet or your laptop to make sure your iPod lasts through the final leg of that cross-continental flight. Encased in a durable, lightweight shell, the Bolt comes with a micro-enabled USB cable and even a pencil to position the device for maximum solar charging. $80 

Motorola Talkabout MS350R Radios: You’ll feel like a kid again with these fun, yet hardworking handheld radios. The Talkabouts have a head-spinning array of features and functionality: They’re floatable and water-resistant, with a 35-mile range, eight repeater channels, weather alerts, a vibrating ringer option, LED flashlight, and nine hours of rechargeable battery use – all packed into a punchy yellow handheld that fits perfectly into your palm. We won’t blame you if you’re slow to get back into cell-phone range just to have an excuse to keep using them. $99

Click here for more holiday gift guides.

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Gadgets for the Traveler

Spread some cheer and goodwill to the travel and adventure junkies on your gift list this year with our picks for travel gadgets sure to enhance every journey.


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Ottawa says air travel to US to get easier Dec 22

Canadians with a Nexus card will soon be able to use it to fly to the United States, allowing them to pass through security at airports faster, the federal government said Thursday.

Stephen Fletcher, minister of state for transport, and other Conservative MPs and ministers held events at airports across the country to remind Canadians about the government’s efforts to make air travel easier. They also highlighted changes to baggage screening for travellers to the United States.


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The Nexus program has been in place for several years and it expedites border clearance for pre-approved travellers. There are dedicated kiosks and lines for Nexus card holders at eight airports: Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Winnipeg.

The card costs $50 and is valid for five years. While the card could be used as a piece of identification while travelling to the United States, the full benefits of the Nexus program only applied for Canadian passengers flying to a domestic or international destination.

“I encourage you to apply now for the Nexus card and soon your passenger screening will be faster for both domestic and US travel,” Fletcher said.

The government is hoping to have the expanded program complete by February 2012.

Speeding travel between the two countries was one of the key points made by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and U.S. President Barack Obama when they announced a “roadmap” for a new trade and security deal on Dec. 7.

In particular, the framework deal commits the two countries to ending the practice of re-screening baggage already cleared by security at Canadian airports when connecting flights are made in the United States.

Fletcher also highlighted that change Thursday, saying it will be phased in over the next three years.

“Once implemented it will make for a better travel experience, faster and more efficient for those who do business travel on a regular basis across the Canada-United States border,” he said.

The border security agreement also promises greater harmonization of Canadian and U.S. security measures, rules to govern the sharing of information, upgrades to border infrastructure and the removal of some cross-border trade barriers.

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Holiday travel may not be as bad as expected Dec 22

Holiday travel may not be as bad as expected, but be prepared

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Las Vegas, NV (KTNV) — If you are traveling around the holidays, good news. It may not be as busy as you expected.

We think of the holidays as the busiest days for air travel. But a lot of people are flying over this period of time so today may not be quite as busy as, say, a Friday during the summer.

Experts expect 43.4 million people to take to the skies between now and New Years, but that’s actually a one percent drop from last years.

And that means there should be about 20 thousand people less in the skies each day.

Now it might not feel that way because there are less flights and there may be some inexperienced travelers who take longer at the airport but that is why more airports are embracing technology to make it easier for folks to get around.

At McCarran International Airport, there is free wireless access in all public areas and about a dozen recharge zones where you can plug in your phones and laptops.

You can also get flight information sent right to your phone or check the airport’s Twitter and Facebook pages for updates on boarding and parking. And some airlines have mobile boarding passes so you don’t even need a paper pass.

Still, the best thing you can do is give yourself plenty of time and be patient.

If you are traveling by car, travel might be a little more difficult.

Winter storms have already hit the Great Plains, causing problems on several major highways from Kansas to New Mexico.

But it’s not just drivers that are being affected. More storms are coming in the next few days and several transportation hubs could be affected.

Snow and low visibility may be an issue in Denver.

Clouds and strong winds are predicted in New York and showers and thunderstorms are in the forecast for Atlanta.

So, if any of your travel plans take you to or through those area, you may want to keep an eye out for possible delays.

Some good news though if you are driving instead of flying. Gas prices are continuing to drop.

Nationally, the average price for a gallon of unleaded is $3.23. Here in Nevada, it is a little higher at $3.32.

Those prices are still higher than last year but much lower than they were just a month ago.

And that is an unexpected holiday treat that may make it easier to plan a little holiday getaway.

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Arab League representatives travel to Syria as violence intensifies Dec 22

The mission begins its work after a surge of violence in the northwest of the country, where local opposition groups say hundreds of people have been killed, although they disagree on whether the casualties were peaceful civilians, armed dissidents or soldiers who had defected.

Wissam Tarif, a human rights activist with the Avaaz group and one of the nominated observers, said he fears that Syrian authorities will endeavor to control which monitors are allowed into the country and what they see when they are there.

He said that the committee would discuss whether monitors would be able to provide their own security, whether they would have the liberty to move without giving notice to Syrian officials and from which groups and countries the approximately 500 observers would be drawn.

“I am concerned that they will negotiate name by name, and I know for sure that they are very tough on liberty of mobilization and on the the security issue,” said Tarif. “The Arab League should make it very clear that they can’t drag this into weeks and weeks of negotiations…The Syrian people do not have the luxury of time.”

News of the death toll this week near the northwestern city of Idlib, which lower estimates put at around 200 people, has prompted outrage from the international community.

“Only two days following the Assad regime’s decision to sign the Arab League initiative, they have already flagrantly violated their commitment to end violence,” said a statement by the White House on Wednesday, which also warned of additional steps to pressure the Assad regime to stop the violence.

The Turkish government, which has become one Assad’s harshest critics, said that the situation in the country was becoming a bloodbath, while the French foreign ministry spokesman called the fighting a “a massacre of unprecedented scale.”

The Syrian National Council, the most prominent opposition group outside the country, has formerly focused on nonviolent solutions to the crisis, but sharpened its tone in the wake of the violence, calling for an emergency meeting of the Arab League and for international forces to guarantee safe zones within Syria and force Syrian soldiers to withdraw from affected areas.

The violence near Idlib was ongoing on Thursday, according to Ali Hassan, a representative of the Syrian Revolution General Commission group. One of the poorest areas of Syria, with most people depending on agriculture, it was hit hard when security forces burned farms and killed livestock earlier this year, according to videos posted on YouTube, and anti-government feeling is high.

Hassan said that 15 civilians and an imam had been killed on Thursday in the area, in an act of collective punishment for having given shelter to members of the group of defected soldiers and armed rebels known as the Free Syrian Army. The area is hilly and wooded, he said, making it an ideal tactical location.

Alaa Yousif, a spokesman for a revolutionary group in Idlib, said the situation was, “miserable, miserable, miserable,” when contacted by telephone. “This is a siege, a curfew, gunfire, no water or bread.” He, too, said that the army had initially been attacking defected soldiers but that they were now all killed or had fled, and that it was civilians and demonstrators who were being shot at by hundreds of army tanks.

“They are not detaining or arresting anyone, they are killing them right away,” said Yousif, calling for NATO intervention and condemning the Arab League’s mediation attempts. He said that he did not have weapons, and nor did other people in the area, though he wished he did.

Syrian state media reported that security forces had “stormed dens of armed terrorist groups” in Idlib and the area of Deraa, seizing caches of weapons, ammunition, explosives and night goggles following clashes with the groups.

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AAA expects slight jump in holiday travel Dec 22

LANCASTER — The sluggish economy and high fuel prices will not keep people off the roads during the upcoming holiday season, AAA-Ohio said.

“We’re expecting 3.4 million Ohioans to be on the road from Dec. 23 to Jan. 2,” local spokeswoman Kimberly Schwind said. “That’s a 1 percent increase from last year. All other holidays this year have been affected by the economy and gas prices. But people wait all year for that end-of-the-year trip, and they are taking them.”

Nationally, AAA expects a 0.9 percent increase in travel from 2010.

Schwind said most Ohioans will travel 50 miles or more when visiting friends and family for the holidays. She said they should make sure their vehicles are in good shape before hitting the road.

“That sounds like just common sense,” Schwind said. “But people don’t realize the number of breakdowns that occur. So people need to be prepared before traveling.”

In 2010, AAA responded to 15,075 roadside assistance calls in the 38 Ohio counties the Columbus regional office serves during the 11-day holiday period.

“We were able to get people on their way without a tow in 65 percent of the cases,” Schwind said. “Lots of times people needed their batteries jumped, or we fixed a flat or someone locked their keys the car.”

AAA has several tips to avoid being stuck on the road:

» Cold weather drains batteries, so be sure to have checked before heading out on that holiday trip.

» The cold weather can also decrease air pressure in tires and make them susceptible to becoming flat. Tires should be inflated to the manufacturer’s recommended pressure. That can be found on the driver’s door jamb or in the owner’s manual. Also, make sure there is sufficient tread depth in each tire. Check the depth by inserting a penny into the tread groove with President Abraham Lincoln’s head upside down. The tread should cover part of his head.

» Be sure to keep a roadside assistance kit in the vehicle, which includes jumper cables, blankets, a flashlight, ice scraper and other safety items.

Another way to help ensure a safe trip is to drive sober. AAA said 430 people died in alcohol-related crashes on Ohio roads in 2010. There were 153 alcohol-related crashes in Fairfield County in 2010.

To help raise awareness of the dangers of drinking and driving, AAA offices are hosting “First a Friend, Then a Host” holiday mocktail competitions.

On Wednesday at the Lancaster office, Dawn Carpenter made an angels’ delight Christmas drink with ice cream and chocolate syrup and Sheri Macoskie made a Brutus Buckeye shake with peanut butter and hot fudge topping. Kelly Riggenbach contributed hot cranberry cider for the promotion.

AAA clients could vote for the best drink during business hours. The idea of the competition was to spotlight non-alcoholic options for holiday events.

“The city used to have a competition like this each year,” Riggenbach said. “But they don’t do it anymore. Our headquarters came up with idea of each office having it.”

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