BREAKING: Halifax Stanfield International Airport (YHZ) is experiencing severe disruption TODAY with 23 flight delays and 12 cancellations stranding hundreds of travelers across Eastern Canada and beyond. The chaosβtriggered by a Yellow Weather Warning for 15-20 cm of snowfall combined with systemic operational strain across Canada’s aviation networkβhas left passengers scrambling for rebooking options as key routes to Toronto, Montreal, Boston, and New York grind to a halt. Air Canada, WestJet, Delta Air Lines, and regional carriers are all battling knock-on effects as Atlantic Canada’s gateway airport faces one of its most disruptive days in recent months.
π CRISIS BY THE NUMBERS (FEBRUARY 12, 2026 – 2:30 PM AST)
Halifax Airport Status:
- 23 total delays (affecting arrivals + departures)
- 12 total cancellations (10% of daily operations)
- Hundreds of passengers stranded
- Yellow Snow Warning active (15-20 cm accumulation)
- Recovery timeline: 24-48 hours
Nationwide Canada Context:
- 262 delays + 77 cancellations across all Canadian airports TODAY
- Toronto Pearson: 109 delays + 17 cancellations (worst affected)
- Montreal-Trudeau: 67 delays + 17 cancellations
- Halifax contribution: 18 delays + 11 cancellations (earlier counts, now increased)
Airlines Most Affected:
- Air Canada: 19 cancellations + 92 delays nationwide (Halifax routes hit hard)
- WestJet: Multiple delays on western connections
- Delta Air Lines: US transborder routes disrupted
- PAL Airlines: Regional/Atlantic routes crippled
- Jazz Aviation: Air Canada Express feeders cancelled
Key Routes Disrupted:
- Halifax β Toronto (multiple cancellations)
- Halifax β Montreal (delays + cancellations)
- Halifax β Boston (transborder delays)
- Halifax β New York (Newark/LaGuardia disrupted)
- Halifax β Ottawa (regional connections affected)
π¨ WHAT’S HAPPENING RIGHT NOW
The Perfect Storm
Halifax Stanfield International Airport, Nova Scotia’s primary aviation gateway, is caught in a vice grip of weather + operational strain affecting Canada’s entire air network today. What began as routine early morning departures quickly cascaded into mounting chaos as:
- Environment Canada’s Yellow Snow Warning (issued 10:46 AM AST Wednesday Feb 11) called for 15-20 cm of snowfall through Thursday morning
- Toronto Pearson and Montreal-Trudeau disruptions (109 and 67 delays respectively) created knock-on effectsβHalifax flights can’t depart when their connecting Toronto/Montreal legs are cancelled
- Crew scheduling nightmares from previous days’ weather events left airlines short-staffed
- De-icing delays compounded runway congestion as snow intensified mid-day
According to Transport Canada aviation trend reporting and live FlightAware data, Halifax is experiencing disproportionate cancellations relative to its size, contributing 12 of Canada’s 77 total cancellations today while handling only a fraction of national traffic.
Why Halifax Is Hit Especially Hard
Unlike major hubs (Toronto, Montreal) which have redundancy and multiple recovery options, Halifax operates as a critical single-point-of-failure for Atlantic Canada:
Geographic Vulnerability:
- Only major airport serving Nova Scotia’s 1 million+ residents
- Critical connection point for Atlantic provinces (New Brunswick, Newfoundland, PEI)
- When Halifax shuts down, entire region loses connectivity
Network Dependency:
- Nearly ALL Halifax flights connect through Toronto or Montreal
- When those hubs experience delays (as they are today), Halifax passengers face:
- Missed connections
- Overnight strandings
- Limited rebooking options (few daily frequencies)
Weather Exposure:
- Atlantic Canada’s “nor’easter alley”
- February = peak winter storm season
- Today’s snowfall (15-20 cm) is the THIRD major storm in three weeks
Infrastructure Constraints:
- Single-runway operations (05/23)
- Limited de-icing capacity vs. major hubs
- Snow-clearing crews stretched thin from recent storms
“Halifax is the canary in the coal mine for Canada’s fragile winter air travel network,” explained aviation analyst Robert Kokonis. “When you see double-digit cancellations here, it signals systemic stress across the entire eastern corridor.”
β° TIMELINE: HOW TODAY’S CHAOS UNFOLDED
Wednesday Evening, February 11 (Overnight)
Environment Canada Issues Yellow Snow Warning:
- 10:46 AM AST February 11: Snowfall warning issued
- Impact Level: Moderate
- Forecast Confidence: High
- Total Accumulation: 15-20 cm (6-8 inches)
- Timing: Wednesday morning through Thursday morning
- Additional Warnings: “Roads and walkways will likely be difficult to navigate. There may be a significant impact on rush hour traffic.”
Halifax Municipality Response:
- Overnight parking ban enforced 1:00-6:00 AM (both central and non-central zones)
- Municipal offices closed at 3:00 PM Wednesday for early snow clearing
- Halifax Transit activated snow routes
Early Morning, February 12 (6:00 AM – 9:00 AM AST)
First Wave of Cancellations:
- Air Canada flights to Toronto/Montreal start cancelling
- Regional carriers (PAL Airlines, Jazz) scrub morning departures
- Passengers receive automated cancellation notices via email/text
Airport Operations:
- De-icing trucks activated at 5:00 AM
- Runway snow-clearing begins
- Terminal operations normal but delays building
Mid-Morning (9:00 AM – 12:00 PM AST)
Delays Compound:
- 9:00 AM: First delays reported (30-45 minutes)
- 10:00 AM: Delays extend to 60-90 minutes
- 11:00 AM: Several flights pushed to afternoon/evening
- 12:00 PM: Cancellations increase to 8-10 flights
Departure boards flicker with constant time changes as airlines juggle crew, aircraft, and weather
Afternoon Meltdown (12:00 PM – 2:30 PM AST – CURRENT)
Crisis Peaks:
- 23 total delays now reported
- 12 total cancellations confirmed
- Passengers lining up at airline desks (2-3 hour waits)
- Hotel rooms near airport selling out
- Car rental agencies overwhelmed
Current Conditions (2:30 PM AST):
- Snow continuing (lighter than morning but persistent)
- Visibility reduced
- De-icing backlog: 45-60 minute waits
- Ground stops on some inbound flights from Toronto
βοΈ AIRLINES MOST AFFECTED
π΄ AIR CANADA β HARDEST HIT (NATIONWIDE + HALIFAX)
Nationwide Disruption:
- 19 cancellations + 92 delays across Canada (16% of operations)
- 7 cancellations + 54 delays at Toronto Pearson alone
Halifax-Specific Impact: Air Canada operates the lion’s share of Halifax’s flights, making it disproportionately vulnerable. Key cancelled/delayed routes:
CANCELLED:
- AC400: Toronto β Montreal (affects Halifax connections)
- AC661: Halifax β Montreal (CANCELLED TWO DAYS IN A ROW – Feb 11 & 12)
- AC222: Toronto β Ottawa (affects Halifax-Ottawa via Toronto)
- AC7501: Toronto β Fredericton (regional connection lost)
HEAVILY DELAYED:
- AC610/612/614: Halifax β Toronto (90-120 minute delays)
- AC620/622: Halifax β Montreal (60-90 minute delays)
- AC6XX series: Multiple Halifax β Toronto/Montreal flights running late
Why Air Canada Is Suffering:
- Crew out of position from previous days’ weather events (Toronto had 232 delays Feb 9)
- Aircraft backlog – planes delayed elsewhere can’t reach Halifax on time
- Maintenance requirements after repeated de-icing cycles stress equipment
- Toronto/Montreal hub dependency – Halifax AC flights almost entirely connect through these hubs
What Air Canada Is Saying: “We are experiencing operational challenges across our network due to winter weather and air traffic congestion. Passengers are advised to check flight status before heading to the airport and can rebook at no charge through our website or mobile app.”
Translation: Expect continued delays/cancellations through tomorrow (February 13)
π WESTJET β WESTERN CONNECTIONS DISRUPTED
Today’s Halifax Impact:
- Multiple delays on Halifax β Toronto β Calgary/Vancouver routes
- Western Canada connections facing 2-3 hour delays
- Some passengers missing onward connections
Key Affected Routes:
- Halifax β Toronto β Calgary
- Halifax β Toronto β Edmonton
- Halifax β Toronto β Winnipeg
The Compound Effect: WestJet passengers in Halifax trying to reach Western Canada face DOUBLE jeopardy:
- Halifax departure delay (weather)
- Toronto connection delay (congestion – Toronto has 109 delays today)
Result: Passengers who booked “safe” 2-hour connections in Toronto are now missing flights, forced to overnight, or wait 24+ hours for next available WestJet service
WestJet’s Caribbean Wildcard: Adding to Halifax WestJet passengers’ woes: WestJet has ALSO suspended all Cuba service (through March 11, 2026) due to Cuba’s nationwide aviation fuel crisis. Passengers who thought they’d rebook Cuba trips are finding NO alternatives.
π΅ DELTA AIR LINES β US TRANSBORDER CHAOS
Halifax-US Routes Affected:
- Halifax β Boston (delays)
- Halifax β New York (Newark, LaGuardia delays)
- Halifax β Atlanta connections disrupted
US Passenger Impact: American travelers flying TO Halifax or THROUGH Halifax are facing:
- Arrival delays (inbound US flights late due to Halifax weather)
- Missed connections (onward flights to Europe/elsewhere from Halifax)
- Customs/immigration delays (backlog of late-arriving passengers)
Delta’s Broader Context: Delta is ALSO dealing with nationwide Canada operational issuesβDelta reported multiple cancellations at Toronto Pearson today, compounding Halifax impacts
π£ PAL AIRLINES β REGIONAL DEVASTATION
Who They Are: PAL Airlines (Provincial Airlines) operates critical regional routes serving:
- Atlantic Canada
- Northern communities
- Smaller Nova Scotia airports
Today’s Catastrophe:
- 12 cancellations (most of any carrier by cancellation count today)
- Nearly 100% cancellation-driven disruption on some routes
- Remote airports like Natuashish, Nain, Goose Bay seeing ALL flights cancelled
Halifax Connection: Many PAL passengers use Halifax as their connection point to reach smaller communities. With Halifax chaos + PAL cancellations, travelers face being stranded FAR from home with no alternative transport.
Example Problem Route:
- Boston β Halifax (Delta) β Goose Bay (PAL)
- Halifax flight delayed 2 hours
- Miss PAL connection to Goose Bay
- Next PAL flight = TOMORROW (and that’s cancelled too)
- Stranded in Halifax 48+ hours with hotel costs piling up
π’ JAZZ AVIATION (AIR CANADA EXPRESS)
Regional Feeder Chaos:
- 4 cancellations + 9 delays nationwide
- Jazz operates Air Canada Express regional routes
- Halifax β Ottawa, Halifax β Moncton, Halifax β Other Maritime routes affected
Why This Matters: Jazz disruptions affect smaller communities relying on Halifax connections to reach Toronto/Montreal
πΊπΈ IMPACT ON US TRAVELERS
For Americans Flying TO Halifax
Bad Timing:
- February 12-14 = Valentine’s Day weekend
- Many Americans planned romantic getaways to Halifax (historic waterfront, winter charm)
- Now stuck in Boston/New York airports or stranded in Halifax unable to return home
Affected Routes:
- Boston (BOS) β Halifax (YHZ): Delays
- New York Newark (EWR) β Halifax: Delays
- New York LaGuardia (LGA) β Halifax (via Toronto): Cancellations (Toronto leg cancelled)
What US Travelers Should Do:
If Flying TO Halifax Today:
- Check flight status EVERY hour (situations changing rapidly)
- Have backup plans (rent car and drive from Boston = 9 hours but may be faster than waiting for rebooked flight tomorrow)
- Book refundable hotels in departure city (Boston, New York) in case flight cancelled
- Monitor weather (snow ending tonight but recovery takes 24-48 hours)
If Flying FROM Halifax Back to US:
- Arrive airport 3+ hours early (check-in lines massive)
- Rebook to tomorrow if possible (operations should improve Feb 13)
- Contact airline proactively (don’t wait for them to notify you)
For Americans Connecting THROUGH Halifax
Bad News: If you booked a clever routing like:
- Denver β Halifax β London (using Halifax as cheaper connection point)
- Los Angeles β Halifax β Paris
You’re likely SCREWED today:
- Inbound US flight to Halifax delayed
- Miss connection to Europe
- Next Europe flight = tomorrow or later
- Hotel costs, meal costs, rebooking chaos
PRO TIP: When booking connections through secondary airports like Halifax, ALWAYS build in 4+ hour buffers during winter months
π¨π¦ IMPACT ON CANADIAN TRAVELERS
Eastern Canada Connectivity Crisis
The Geographic Problem: Halifax serves as THE gateway for Atlantic Canada. When Halifax fails, the entire region loses air connectivity:
Stranded Populations:
- Nova Scotians trying to reach Toronto/Montreal for business, family
- New Brunswick residents connecting through Halifax (Moncton also affected)
- PEI travelers (Charlottetown has limited service, many route through Halifax)
- Newfoundland passengers (St. John’s connections disrupted)
Domestic Route Chaos
Halifax β Toronto:
- Nearly EVERY Air Canada flight delayed 60-120 minutes
- Some cancelled outright
- Passengers missing onward connections to Western Canada, US, Europe
Halifax β Montreal:
- AC661 cancelled TWO days in row (Feb 11 + Feb 12) = systemic crew/aircraft positioning failure
- Other Montreal flights delayed 60-90 minutes
Halifax β Ottawa:
- Regional connections disrupted
- Government travelers (Halifax = military base, public sector workers) unable to reach capital
Halifax β Western Canada (via Toronto):
- Calgary, Vancouver, Edmonton connections all facing delays
- Many passengers forced to overnight in Toronto (hotels near Pearson 90%+ booked)
The Unique Atlantic Canada Challenge
Why This Hurts More Here:
1. Limited Flight Frequencies: Unlike Toronto-Montreal (50+ daily flights), Halifax routes operate 2-4 times daily. Miss one flight = wait 6-12 hours for next.
2. No Alternative Airports:
- Toronto passengers can drive to Hamilton, Billy Bishop, Buffalo
- Halifax passengers have NOWHERE else to go (Moncton 270 km away, limited routes)
3. Weather Reliability:
- Atlantic Canada = nor’easter zone
- Multiple storms per winter guaranteed
- Today’s storm = THIRD in three weeks
4. Economic Impact:
- Business travelers missing meetings
- Medical travelers missing appointments (Halifax = regional medical hub)
- Military personnel unable to reach CFB Halifax (major naval base)
π¬π§ IMPACT ON UK TRAVELERS
Transatlantic Connection Chaos
UK-Halifax Routes: While no direct UK-Halifax flights exist today, British travelers use Halifax as a connection point for:
- London β Toronto β Halifax (visiting family, tourism)
- London β Halifax β US destinations (cheaper routing)
Today’s Problem:
- British Airways reported delays at Toronto Pearson today
- UK passengers arriving Toronto late = miss Halifax connections
- Stranded in Toronto unable to reach Maritime relatives
Air Canada UK-Canada Routes Affected:
- London Heathrow β Toronto (then Halifax connection missed)
- London Heathrow β Montreal (then Halifax connection missed)
π¦πΊ IMPACT ON AUSTRALIAN TRAVELERS
Rare But Real Connection Point
Why Australians Use Halifax:
- Some creative routing: Sydney β Vancouver β Toronto β Halifax (to visit Maritime family or explore East Coast)
- Working holiday visa holders traveling to farms/fishing industry jobs in Nova Scotia
Today’s Nightmare:
- 18+ hour journey from Australia to Halifax
- Arrive Toronto exhausted
- Discover Halifax connection cancelled
- Forced to overnight in Toronto (already dealing with 109 delays)
- Miss first day of job/family visit
π° PASSENGER RIGHTS: WHAT YOU’RE ENTITLED TO
π¨π¦ Canadian Air Passenger Protection Regulations (APPR)
The Good News: Canada has STRONG passenger rights laws (among best in world)
The Bad News: Weather delays typically = “outside airline control” = NO CASH COMPENSATION
What You ARE Entitled To (Even for Weather):
β
Rebooking Options:
- Free rebooking on next available flight (any airline if yours can’t accommodate within reasonable time)
- No change fees
- No fare difference if rebooking within ~24 hours
β
Refund:
- If you decide not to travel due to cancellation/major delay, airline MUST refund your ticket
- Credit card refunds within 7 days
- Other payment methods within 20 days
β
Communication:
- Airline must keep you informed of delays/cancellations
- Must provide timely updates on status changes
What You’re NOT Entitled To (For Weather):
β Cash Compensation:
- NO $400-$1,000 compensation for weather delays (only for airline-caused delays)
β Meals/Hotels:
- Airlines not required to provide meals, hotels, or ground transport for weather-related disruptions
- HOWEVER, many airlines provide these anyway as customer service gesture
The Gray Area: Today’s chaos involves BOTH weather AND operational issues:
- Initial delays = weather (snow)
- But ongoing cancellations on Feb 12 = arguably crew/aircraft positioning = AIRLINE’S FAULT
If you argue delay is “controllable” you MAY be entitled to:
- $400 CAD (delay 3-6 hours)
- $700 CAD (delay 6-9 hours)
- $1,000 CAD (delay 9+ hours)
How to Claim:
- File complaint with airline within 1 year
- Keep all receipts (hotels, meals, alternative transport)
- If airline denies, escalate to Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA)
- CTA decisions can take 12-18 months but are binding
Canadian Transportation Agency:
πΊπΈ US Passenger Rights (For US-Originating Flights)
US DOT Rules (Weaker Than Canada):
β
What You Get:
- Refund if flight cancelled
- Rebooking on next available flight
β What You DON’T Get:
- NO federal compensation requirement for delays/cancellations
- NO mandatory meals/hotels
- Individual airline policies vary
For Flights TO/FROM US: If your flight originates in US (Boston β Halifax), US rules apply = WEAKER protections
π HOW TO REBOOK YOUR FLIGHT (STEP-BY-STEP)
Priority 1: Check Your Flight Status NOW
Don’t Wait for Airline Notification: Airlines are overwhelmed and notifications may be delayed/not sent
Check Directly:
Option 1: Self-Service Online Rebooking (FASTEST)
Air Canada:
- Go to aircanada.com or open app
- “Manage Booking”
- Enter 6-letter confirmation code
- “Change Flight”
- Select next available flight (no fee for weather disruptions)
Current Issue: High online traffic = website may be slow
WestJet:
- westjet.com β “Manage Trips”
- Enter confirmation code
- “Modify Flight”
- Choose new flight
Delta:
- delta.com β “My Trips”
- Enter confirmation number
- “Change Flight”
- System shows alternatives
Option 2: Phone Rebooking (LONG WAIT TIMES)
Air Canada:
- Canada: 1-888-247-2262
- US: 1-514-393-3333
- Aeroplan Members: 1-800-361-5373
Current Wait Times: 90-120+ minutes (lines overwhelmed)
WestJet:
- Toll-Free: 1-888-937-8538
- International: 1-403-444-2446
Current Wait Times: 60-90 minutes
Delta:
- US/Canada: 1-800-221-1212
Current Wait Times: 45-90 minutes
PRO TIP: Call at off-peak hours (midnight-6:00 AM) for shorter waits
Option 3: Airport Counter (IN PERSON)
Halifax Airport Airline Desks:
- Air Canada: Main terminal, check-in area
- WestJet: Main terminal
- Delta: International departures area
Current Wait Times: 2-4 HOURS reported
When to Use Airport Counter:
- Complex itineraries (multi-city, international connections)
- Need to check bags
- Require written documentation for insurance claims
When NOT to Use:
- Simple rebooking (use online/app instead)
- If you’re not already at airport (lines massive)
Option 4: Social Media (SURPRISINGLY EFFECTIVE)
Air Canada Twitter/X: @AirCanada
Air Canada Facebook Messenger
WestJet Twitter/X: @WestJet
Delta Twitter/X: @Delta
Response Times: 30-90 minutes (often faster than phone)
What to Include in Message:
- Confirmation code
- Flight number
- Current status (cancelled/delayed)
- Request specific rebooking (date/time)
π‘οΈ TRAVEL INSURANCE: WHAT’S COVERED
Will Insurance Cover Today’s Disruptions?
Short Answer: Depends on your policy
Likely COVERED:
β
Trip Interruption:
- If you miss a cruise departure, tour start, or time-sensitive event due to delays
- Example: Halifax delay causes you to miss cruise leaving from New York tomorrow
β
Missed Connection:
- If Halifax delay causes you to miss connecting flight and you incur hotel/meal costs
β
Additional Accommodation:
- Hotel costs if stranded overnight due to cancellations
β
Meals:
- Some policies cover meal expenses during extended delays (usually 6+ hours)
Likely NOT COVERED:
β Weather-Related Cancellations:
- Most policies exclude “known weather events”
- Today’s snow warning was issued yesterday = KNOWN EVENT
β Airline-Provided Rebooking:
- If airline rebooks you for free (which they’re required to), insurance won’t pay
β Cash Compensation:
- Insurance reimburses expenses, doesn’t provide compensation
Policy Types:
Basic Trip Cancellation: Usually does NOT cover weather delays once trip started. Only covers cancellation before departure.
Comprehensive Travel Insurance: May cover delays 6+ hours with limits ($200-500 per day for meals/hotels)
“Cancel For Any Reason” (CFAR):
- Covers up to 75% of non-refundable costs if you decide not to travel
- Must be purchased within 14 days of initial trip booking
- Must cancel 48+ hours before departure
Top Insurance Providers:
Canada:
- Manulife Travel Insurance: 1-888-626-8543
- TD Insurance: 1-866-374-1129
- RBC Travel Insurance: 1-888-313-4722
United States:
- Allianz Travel Insurance: 1-866-884-3556
- Travel Guard: 1-800-826-4919
United Kingdom:
- Post Office Travel Insurance: +44 800 169 2571
Australia:
How to File Claim:
- Keep ALL receipts: Hotels, meals, alternative transport, parking
- Document everything: Screenshots of flight status, cancellation emails
- Get airline confirmation: Written proof of delay/cancellation cause (weather vs. operational)
- File promptly: Usually within 30-90 days
- Provide booking confirmations: Original itinerary + rebooked itinerary
π¨οΈ THE WEATHER: WHAT’S CAUSING THIS
Environment Canada Yellow Snow Warning
Issued: 10:46 AM AST, Wednesday February 11, 2026
Impact Level: Moderate
Forecast Confidence: High
Details:
- Total Snowfall: 15-20 cm (6-8 inches)
- Timing: Wednesday morning through Thursday morning
- Affected Areas: Halifax Metro, Halifax County West, entire Nova Scotia
- Additional Hazards: “Roads and walkways will likely be difficult to navigate due to accumulating snow. There may be a significant impact on rush hour traffic. Local utility outages are possible.”
How the Storm System Works
Low Pressure System:
- Tracking south of Nova Scotia
- Pulling moisture from Atlantic Ocean
- Collision with cold Arctic air = heavy snow
Intensification Pattern:
- Snow began lightly Wednesday morning
- Intensified mid-day Wednesday as system moved eastward
- Expected to taper Thursday morning over western Nova Scotia
- Eastern Nova Scotia may see snow persist into Thursday afternoon
Why This Storm Is Nasty:
- Fine, light snow = easily blown by wind = reduced visibility
- Sustained snowfall (24+ hours) = difficult to clear runways fast enough
- Temperature near 0Β°C = wet, heavy snow = harder to remove
The Broader Context: Third Storm in Three Weeks
Halifax Has Been PUMMELED:
Storm #1 (Late January):
- Major nor’easter
- School closures, power outages
Storm #2 (February 2, 2026 – Groundhog Day):
- Heavy snow and high winds
- Annual Groundhog Day event in Shubenacadie cancelled
Storm #3 (February 11-12, 2026 – TODAY):
- 15-20 cm snowfall
- Cumulative exhaustion for snow-clearing crews, airlines, travelers
Jason Sheppard, Environment Canada Meteorologist: “Stay tuned. We’re only the first of February, so we’ve got another six to eight weeks to go yet.”
Translation: More storms coming. Halifax travelers should EXPECT disruptions through March.
π ESSENTIAL RESOURCES & CONTACTS
Halifax Stanfield International Airport
Website: halifaxstanfield.ca
Flight Status: halifaxstanfield.ca/flights
Twitter/X: @HfxStanfield
Phone: +1-902-873-4422
Ground Transportation:
- Halifax Transit Bus 320: Airport β Downtown Halifax ($3.75 CAD)
- Taxis: Approx $65 CAD to downtown
- Rental Cars: Avis, Budget, Enterprise, Hertz, National at terminal
Airlines
Air Canada:
WestJet:
Delta Air Lines:
PAL Airlines:
Jazz Aviation:
- Bookings through Air Canada
Government Resources
Canadian Transportation Agency (APPR):
Environment Canada (Weather):
Halifax Regional Municipality:
Real-Time Flight Tracking
FlightAware: flightaware.com/live/airport/CYHZ
FlightRadar24: flightradar24.com/airport/yhz
π° RELATED ARTICLES
Canada Aviation Crisis:
Winter Travel Chaos:
Passenger Rights:
Last Updated: February 12, 2026 at 2:30 PM AST
Status: Ongoing disruptions, recovery expected Thursday Feb 13
Next Update: February 13, 2026 at 8:00 AM AST
Posted By : Vinay
As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.