A "record number" of flights traveled across the U.S. during Thanksgiving week this year, the Federal Aviation Administration says.
Between Sunday, Nov. 24 and Thursday, Nov. 28, the FAA says it "safely moved more than 232,000 flights" in the U.S., including 52,000 alone on Tuesday.
A total of 12,137,606 people passed through Transportation Security Administration checkpoints during that timeframe, including more than 2.7 million the day before Thanksgiving, according to the latest figures from that agency.
That’s an increase from the 11,740,934 passengers that the TSA recorded traveling during the same 5-day period last year.
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"To help with East Coast traffic volume, the FAA used military airspace off the Atlantic Coast and Gulf of Mexico that the military released for commercial plane use," the FAA told Gxstocks in a statement.
"Controllers implemented traffic management initiatives to help move air traffic expeditiously during bad weather in the Northeast and West Coast, and snow in the Rockies," it continued.
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"Despite the record numbers, only 0.3 percent of flights were cancelled, and delays were a record low of 1.2 percent of flights," the FAA added.
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"The FAA is ready for continued record flight volume through Monday," it also said. "Today, low clouds and wind may cause some minor delays at New York airports and in Boston and Philadelphia. The Great Lakes area can expect snow Saturday through Monday."