Community Corner

UPDATED Noon Sunday: Bay Area Travelers Feel Effects of Hurricane as Northeast Airports Close

Meteorologists said Hurricane Irene, a Category 1 storm with peak sustained winds of 85 miles per hour, is crippling the East Coast.

UPDATE: A total of 41 flights from San Francisco International Airport to the East Coast have been cancelled today due to severe weather caused by Hurricane Irene, an airport duty manager said.

All airports in the northeast have been closed over the weekend in a massive infrastructure shut down that has affected millions. Airport officials said that no flights are leaving the northeast region today, with the exception of Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C.

As of 10:30 a.m. Sunday no flights are scheduled to be canceled Monday, and while there may still be announcements of cancellations, airport traffic may be back on schedule tomorrow.

Find out what's happening in Rohnert Park-Cotatiwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

This article was updated noon Sunday.

The effects of Hurricane Irene, the tempest battering the East Coast, can be felt here in the Bay Area as dozens of flights have been canceled because of storm-related airport closures.

Find out what's happening in Rohnert Park-Cotatiwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

According to the Federal Aviation Administration, four airports in the New York City Metropolitan Area -- New Jersey's Newark Liberty International Airport, New York City's John F. Kennedy International and LaGuardia International airports, and Stewart International Airport in Newburgh -- closed at noon Eastern time.

"Any flights scheduled to land after approximately 10 a.m. (Eastern) today were canceled, arriving or departing," JetBlue Airways spokesman Mateo Lleras said of flights between the Bay Area and the East Coast.

The cancellations apply to flights into or out of Newark, JFK, LaGuardia and Stewart, as well as Boston's Logan International Airport, and White Plain's Westchester County Airport, Lleras said.

Travelers headed beyond the New York and Boston metropolitan areas are also advised to check the status of their flights because of ripple effects that are expected to affect flights across the country.

More than 40 flights out of San Francisco International Airport to the Northeast have been canceled in anticipation of the Category 1 hurricane, airport spokesman Michael McCarron said. Most major airlines have canceled flights between SFO to various Northeast airports.

McCarron advises all passengers, regardless of their destination and carrier, contact their airline for flight information. Passengers should not come to the airport unless their carrier has indicated that their flight will depart as scheduled.

In the South Bay, two JetBlue flights that were scheduled to depart from Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport this evening have been canceled, airport communications director David Vossbrink said.

"For the rest of our flights, there will be no direct effects," he said.

Vossbrink echoed McCaron's advice for travelers to check on flight statuses no matter where they are headed today.

"Even if you're going to Denver or Seattle, there's always a possibility that those flights could be delayed," Vossbrink said.

Although Silicon Valley travelers might not be as affected as those who fly into or out of SFO or Oakland, Vossbrink said that the small number of cancellations highlights the fact that airlines are not operating enough flights out of San Jose.

"We should have a lot more East Coast flights," Vossbrink said. "Airlines should really be serving Silicon Valley with more flights than they're doing now."

Editor's note: Patches on the East Coast are following the hurricane closely. Check out on to-the-minute hurricane updates to stay on top of breaking news.

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