Tuesday,
September 11, 2001
FAA
orders planes to ground; security heightened at airports
By Chrissy Braden
Senior Reporter
Passengers were crowded around airline counters, using their
luggage as chairs and pillows, while they waited at the Dallas/Fort
Worth International Airport after departing flights
were halted as of 10:03 a.m. Tuesday.
The
Federal Aviation Administration closed all of the nations
airports for the first time until at least 11 a.m. today after
four planes were hijacked Tuesday. Two of the hijacked planes
crashed into the World Trade Center towers in New York City
and another into The Pentagon in Washington.
Two
of the planes belong to American Airlines, which is based
in Fort Worth.
American
Airlines officials declined to comment.
David
Arnold, a Delta passenger from Jackson, Miss., flying to Las
Vegas, said he knew airport security was diligent, but he
still doesnt understand how the hijacking took place.
It
worries me, he said. It seems like the FBI or
some intelligence agency should have known.
James
Crites, executive vice president of operations of D/FW, said
contingency plans for security and safety will remain in effect
until further notice, even though there is no information
about threats to D/FW.
Due
to the sensitive nature of these plans, I wont discuss
any of the specifics related to security and safety,
he said in a press conference Tuesday.
He
said security teams will continue to sweep terminal areas,
but gate and concession areas will remain closed indefinitely.
Anne
OMara, a Delta passenger from Houston on her way to
Salt Lake City, said she was notified during her flight that
the plane would land at D/FW, the nearest airport, due to
a national incident.
We
were all confused, she said. I got up and went
to the bathroom in the back of the plane and found a flight
attendant who told me what had happened.
Airlines
rescheduled flights and made hotel reservations for stranded
passengers, like OMara.
Kevin
Cox, senior executive vice president of D/FW, said passengers
will be assisted as long as they need to be. He didnt
have an estimate of the total number of passengers the airport
relocated.
In
another effort to help, two regulated American Airlines planes
departed D/FW Tuesday carrying only airline personnel to assist
in the tragedy, according to ABC World News.
The
airlines have also been contacted from numerous individuals
interested in doing whatever they can to help those in need.
Carry
Utter, a resident of Valley Ranch, waited by the Delta counter
to offer her home to stranded passengers.
My
husband said he knew what it was like to be stranded out-of-state
and have all of the hotels fill up, she said. We
knew we had to go to the airport and do something.
D/FW
had 150 planes on the ground Tuesday afternoon, Cox said.
D/FW has about 2,300 flight operations each day and grosses
about $11 million a year.
Crites
said taxis and buses can continue to operate at the airport.
Legally parked cars at the airport will not be ticketed, but
no unattended vehicles can be parked at the terminal curbs.
Cox
said airports will resume business when the FAA, airlines
and the airport agree to reopen.
We
at D/FW are working closely with those partners and will be
ready to go when theyre ready to fly, he said.
Chrissy
Braden
l.c.braden@student.tcu.edu
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