JWA remains closed
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Paul Clinton
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -- While flights are expected to resume today on a
limited basis at the nation’s airports, it remained unclear late
Wednesday whether John Wayne would be among those open for business.
The airport resembled a ghost town again Wednesday, one day after
terrorist attacks in New York City and near Washington, D.C., shook the
country’s confidence and caused a shutdown of the nation’s air-travel
system for the first time ever.
As travelers waited Wednesday for the airport to reopen, officials
from John Wayne’s 10 commercial airlines, airport staff and security
busied themselves with preparations for the eventual return to normalcy.
Some flights did leave the airport Wednesday, mainly private charter
planes hired by the federal government to transport emergency personnel
to New York and Washington, D.C., to assist with rescue efforts.
Before John Wayne can reopen for commercial flights, it must comply
with an 11-point security directive issued by the Federal Aviation
Administration on Wednesday.
“We’re not going to be able to fly until we have met the security
measures we have been asked to implement,” airport spokeswoman Yolanda
Perez said. “It will be a very slow start-up process.”
Changes that must be implemented include:
* discontinuance of check-in services from the airport’s curb or at
other locations off airport property;
* implementation of thorough searches of all airplanes before
takeoff;
* restriction of only ticketed passengers to the boarding areas;
* a ban on any knife or cutting instrument on a flight;
* closer monitoring of vehicles near the airport terminal.
The FAA has not stated a day or time when it will fully drop the
“group stop” imposed at 6:49 a.m. Tuesday.
However, United Airlines, in a statement on the company’s Web site,
announced it was set to begin “limited scheduled operations” at 10 a.m.
Pacific time today after completing flights diverted Tuesday.
No diverted flights were on their way to John Wayne Airport on
Tuesday, which was witness to the worst terrorist attack ever on U.S.
soil. Four commercial planes were hijacked. Two were flown into New
York’s World Trade Center Twin Towers, which later collapsed, killing
still unknown numbers.
A third plane crashed into the Pentagon, just across the Potomac River
from the nation’s capital. Hundreds are believed dead there. The fourth
plane crashed in a rural part of Pennsylvania.
It is believed all four planes were hijacked by three to
fiveknife-wielding assailants.
About 250 flights arrive and depart at John Wayne on an average day.
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