Published on : 28 Mar 2026
Breaking: New York LaGuardia Airport records 523 delays + 129 cancellations TODAY (Saturday March 28, 2026) — 652 total disruptions — as a vicious combination of freezing rain, single-digit wind chills, and icy runway conditions devastates American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, and Republic Airways, while every departing aircraft requires extended de-icing treatment adding 30-60 minutes to every gate departure, disrupting flights to Chicago O’Hare, Boston Logan, Detroit Metropolitan, and Toronto Pearson across US and Canadian networks as today marks Day 6 of the Air Canada disaster — the fatal March 23 runway collision that killed two Jazz Aviation pilots and closed Runway 31 through much of this week — with Runway 31 now finally reopening today after six devastating days that collectively erased 3,000+ flights and stranded 450,000+ passengers, while wind chills dropping into single digits and teens are creating dangerous conditions for outdoor boarding, ground crews, and aircraft operations, and the TSA staffing crisis (Day 43 of the federal shutdown) continues to extend security wait times to 2-3 hours at LGA checkpoints, making Easter Saturday at LaGuardia the single most operationally complex day at New York City’s busiest domestic airport in 2026. Here’s everything every LGA traveler needs to know right now.
Published: March 28, 2026 (Saturday — Easter Weekend Day 1) — ONGOING CRISIS Total Disruptions: 523 delays + 129 cancellations = 652 total Weather: Freezing rain + single-digit wind chills + icy runway conditions + de-icing required all flights Airlines Affected: American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, Republic Airways + others Routes Broken: Chicago O’Hare, Boston Logan, Detroit Metropolitan, Toronto Pearson + domestic network Air Canada Disaster: Day 6 — Runway 31 REOPENING TODAY after 6-day closure (March 23–28) LGA Disruption Arc: Day 3 (March 25): 698 total → Day 4 (March 26): 583 total → Day 6 (March 28): 652 total Passengers Affected: Estimated 97,800 (652 disruptions × 150 avg passengers — highest estimate this week!) De-Icing: Every departing aircraft requires treatment — adds 30-60 minutes minimum per flight TSA Status: Day 43 of shutdown — 2-3 hour security lines at LGA checkpoints Alternative Airports: JFK (AirTrain + Subway from Jamaica), Newark EWR (NJ Transit from Penn Station)
Saturday, March 28, 2026 delivers 523 delays + 129 cancellations = 652 total disruptions at New York LaGuardia Airport — the highest disruption total of any LGA crisis day this week outside the catastrophic March 24 airport-closure day — as freezing rain, single-digit wind chills, and icy runway surfaces create conditions requiring every departing aircraft to undergo mandatory de-icing treatment, adding a minimum 30-60 minutes of delay to every gate push before a wheel leaves the ground, as American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, and Republic Airways are all severely disrupted on routes to Chicago O’Hare, Boston Logan, Detroit Metropolitan, and Toronto Pearson, while today simultaneously marks Day 6 of the Air Canada Express runway disaster — the fatal March 23 collision between Jazz Aviation Flight 8646 and a Port Authority fire truck that killed two pilots, hospitalized 41 passengers, closed Runway 31 for six days, and eliminated 35% of LaGuardia’s operational capacity during the worst possible week — the lead-up to Easter weekend, with Runway 31 reopening today after its longest closure since construction, and the TSA staffing crisis (Day 43 of the federal shutdown, 300+ officer resignations) continuing to push LGA security lines to 2-3 hours on a day when Easter Saturday passenger volumes are at their annual peak.
LGA Six-Day Disaster Arc — The Full Picture:
| Day | Date | Cancels | Delays | Total | Primary Cause |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | March 23 | 637 | 174 | 811 | Crash + airport closure until 2 PM |
| Day 2 | March 24 | 635 | 174 | 809 | Airport reopened with 1 runway = 35% capacity loss |
| Day 3 | March 25 | 315 | 383 | 698 | Storm system + 1-runway ops |
| Day 4 | March 26 | 338 | 245 | 583 | Cascade + 1-runway ops |
| Day 5 | March 27 | ~140 | ~380 | ~520 | Spring storm + 1-runway ops |
| Day 6 | March 28 | 129 | 523 | 652 | Freezing rain + de-icing + 1-runway (until reopening today!) |
| 6-Day Total | ~2,194 | ~1,879 | ~4,073 | Air Canada crash aftermath |
✈️ March 28 total: 523 delays + 129 cancellations = 652 disruptions ✈️ Six-day cumulative: Approximately 4,073 total disruptions since March 23 ✈️ Passengers affected this week: Estimated 450,000+ across the six-day crisis ✈️ Today’s unique factor: Freezing rain + de-icing mandatory + Runway 31 REOPENING + Easter Saturday surge ✈️ Wind chills: Single digits to teens — dangerous outdoor conditions for ground crews and boarding passengers ✈️ TSA: Day 43 of shutdown — 2-3 hour security lines compounding flight delays
What’s Happening Right Now at LGA:
✈️ Freezing rain: Active — coating runways, taxiways, aircraft surfaces, and jet bridges ✈️ De-icing: Every departing aircraft requires Type I + Type II anti-icing fluid treatment ✈️ De-icing wait time: 30-60 minutes per aircraft (at LGA’s single de-icing pad, longer with full schedule) ✈️ Wind chill: Single digits to low teens — ground crews limited to 15-20 minute outdoor exposure cycles ✈️ Runway 31: REOPENING TODAY — NTSB has cleared the debris field for operational resumption ✈️ Impact of Runway 31 reopening: Capacity returning to near-normal — but TODAY’s backlog already set
Why 652 Disruptions Today Despite Runway 31 Reopening:
The critical question passengers are asking: “If Runway 31 is reopening today, why are there 652 disruptions?” The answer is the de-icing compound effect:
Today’s weather at LaGuardia is not dramatic — no blizzard, no thunderstorms, no tornadoes. What freezing rain delivers is something more operationally destructive: a relentless, invisible coating of ice on every surface that grounds ordinary operations to a halt.
Freezing Rain — What It Does to an Airport:
✈️ Runways: Ice coating reduces braking effectiveness — runway contamination checks required before every landing ✈️ Taxiways: Jet blast from aircraft + freezing rain = re-icing after every aircraft movement ✈️ Aircraft surfaces: Ice accumulates on wings, fuselage, engines, and control surfaces — all must be cleared ✈️ Jet bridges: Icy jet bridge surfaces create boarding safety hazard — slower boarding process ✈️ Ground equipment: Baggage loaders, tugs, fuel trucks — all operating on icy ramp surfaces (slower, safer speeds required) ✈️ Deicing fluid trucks: Must treat every aircraft — today, they are working non-stop
The De-Icing Process — Why It Adds 30-60 Minutes:
Every aircraft departing LaGuardia today goes through this mandatory sequence:
Wind Chill: Single Digits to Teens — Ground Crew Safety Emergency:
With wind chills dropping into the single digits and teens, the cold is creating additional concerns for those waiting outside the terminals or boarding planes. While the skies will remain sunny on Friday, these frigid conditions make it unsafe to operate outdoor boarding and deboarding without additional precautions, potentially delaying the boarding process. The cold temperatures are also affecting ground operations, with some flights experiencing delays due to slower boarding procedures and extended de-icing times for aircraft.
What This Means in Practice:
American Airlines — operating LGA as a major domestic hub with high-frequency shuttle and Northeast services — is today’s most disrupted major carrier at LaGuardia, absorbing both the delay impact of de-icing queue wait times and the cancellation burden of freezing rain’s effect on its regional feeders.
American Airlines at LGA:
✈️ Hub role: Primary domestic carrier at LGA — New York shuttle services, Northeast corridor, regional feeders ✈️ Terminal: Terminal B (American’s LaGuardia terminal — the newest at LGA, opened 2022) ✈️ March 28 impact: Significant cancellations + delays — highest overall American disruption volume at LGA today ✈️ Routes hit: Chicago O’Hare (ORD), Boston Logan (BOS), Detroit (DTW), Charlotte (CLT), Washington DCA
Why American Hits Hardest at LGA:
American’s LGA operation is heavily concentrated in the Northeast shuttle corridor — the high-frequency Boston, Washington, and Chicago routes that carry the highest volume of business travelers. On a freezing rain morning:
American’s Travel Waiver — Still Active:
American Airlines issued a travel waiver covering LaGuardia disruptions that may still cover today’s travel. Key details:
✈️ Check: aa.com/travelalerts — verify whether your March 28 itinerary qualifies ✈️ Benefit: Rebook without change fee, waived fare difference on same cabin ✈️ Phone: 1-800-433-7300 ✈️ Note: American Airlines stated it will reaccommodate passengers who miss flights due to longer-than-normal security lines free of charge — particularly relevant given today’s 2-3 hour LGA security queues
Example — New York to Chicago Business Traveler:
Patricia, flying American LGA → Chicago O’Hare for Easter family visit:
Delta Air Lines — operating at LGA’s Terminal C and running high-frequency Northeast services including the famous DL shuttle to Boston and Washington — is experiencing significant disruption today as de-icing queues compound with the residual cascade from five days of single-runway operations.
Delta Air Lines at LGA:
✈️ Terminal: Terminal C (Delta’s LaGuardia terminal) ✈️ Delta Sky Club: Available at Terminal C — but today, even Sky Club members face delayed flights ✈️ Shuttle service: Delta runs 30-60 minute frequency BOS + DCA shuttles — freezing rain devastates shuttle cadence ✈️ March 28 impact: Significant delays + cancellations — Delta’s LGA operation running 1-2+ hours behind
Delta’s Six-Day LGA Context:
Delta has been the most consistently disrupted major carrier throughout LGA’s six-day Air Canada disaster recovery — recording 55 cancellations on March 26 alone (when it had a 9-delay vs 55-cancellation ratio — the exact opposite of today’s delay-heavy picture). Today’s shift from Delta cancellations to Delta delays reflects the changing operational profile as Runway 31 reopens and the acute single-runway phase ends, but freezing rain creates a new delay driver.
Delta’s Waiver:
Delta Air Lines issued a travel advisory due to the LaGuardia airport closure, covering travel to, from, and through New York City and Newark areas. This waiver may have been extended to cover today’s freezing rain disruptions:
✈️ Check: fly.delta.com → My Trips → Travel Alert banner ✈️ Phone: 1-800-221-1212 ✈️ Delta Sky Club: If your flight is significantly delayed, access Terminal C Sky Club while waiting
Example — Delta Shuttle Passenger:
James, flying Delta LGA → Boston Logan for Easter weekend:
Southwest Airlines — running its point-to-point network through LaGuardia as a key Eastern operation — is absorbing the freezing rain impact across its entire LGA departure bank today, with every Southwest flight requiring de-icing before departure.
Southwest Airlines at LGA:
✈️ Terminal: Terminal B (Southwest’s LaGuardia gates) ✈️ Routes: Chicago Midway (MDW), Baltimore (BWI), Orlando (MCO), Nashville (BNA), Denver (DEN) ✈️ Frequency: Multiple daily departures on each route — cascade hits hard when every departure is delayed ✈️ March 28 impact: Significant delays across all Southwest LGA departures
Southwest’s Best-in-Class Response:
Regardless of the disruption cause, Southwest’s passenger-protection policies remain the strongest of any US carrier at LGA today:
✈️ No change fees — ever: Even Wanna Get Away fares get free rebooking today ✈️ Self-service rebooking: Southwest app → Change Flight → no agent needed ✈️ Phone: 1-800-435-9792 ✈️ Waiver: Southwest is assisting customers at airports experiencing extended wait times, including waivers to change travel.
The Point-to-Point Cascade in Freezing Rain:
Southwest’s aircraft fly 4-6 rotations per day. A de-icing delay on the morning LGA → MDW flight means the same aircraft arrives at MDW late, departs MDW late for its return, arrives LGA late, needs de-icing AGAIN, and departs its next LGA leg late — a cascade that compounds across the entire day for that aircraft.
Republic Airways — operating as both American Eagle and United Express at LaGuardia, connecting smaller Northeast and Midwest cities to LGA — is today’s regional carrier most severely disrupted by the freezing rain + de-icing combination, with its smaller regional jets particularly vulnerable to extreme cold and icing conditions.
Republic Airways at LGA:
✈️ Operator: American Eagle (for American) + United Express (for United) at LGA ✈️ Aircraft: Embraer E170/E175 — regional jets with greater icing exposure than mainline narrow-bodies ✈️ Routes: Boston, Detroit, Toronto (US side), Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Baltimore, Washington from LGA ✈️ March 28 impact: Cancellations + delays — Republic’s highest-priority disruption routes today
Republic’s Six-Day LGA Context:
Republic Airways has been the single most catastrophically disrupted carrier throughout the entire LGA six-day crisis:
The back-to-back-to-back disruption days have left Republic with a crew positioning problem that no single clear-weather day can fully resolve. Pilots and flight attendants who were stranded in wrong cities on March 23-26 have been working recovery rotations — but federal duty-hour limits mean some are still unavailable today.
Routes Specifically Hit by Freezing Rain:
✈️ LGA → Boston (BOS): Republic American Eagle service — Boston also experiencing freezing rain conditions (cascade both ways!) ✈️ LGA → Detroit (DTW): Republic United Express — Detroit adding its own winter weather pressure ✈️ LGA → Toronto (YYZ): Republic/Jazz Aviation trans-border — Toronto at 301 disruptions today (see separate article) ✈️ LGA → Pittsburgh (PIT): Republic — smaller market, no alternatives if Republic cancels ✈️ LGA → Cleveland (CLE): Republic — midwest connection disrupted
Example — Detroit-Bound Passenger:
Angela, flying Republic/American Eagle LGA → Detroit for Easter family:
Today is the final day of the Air Canada Express runway disaster recovery at LaGuardia. To understand why 652 disruptions are still happening on Day 6 — and why Runway 31 reopening matters but doesn’t immediately fix everything — here is the complete story.
March 23, 2026 — The Crash:
At approximately 11:40 PM on Sunday March 23, Air Canada Express Flight 8646 — a Bombardier CRJ-900 operated by Jazz Aviation — was on final approach to LaGuardia’s Runway 31 when it collided with a Port Authority Police Department fire truck that was crossing the runway. The CRJ-900 struck the fire truck, both aircraft and vehicle were severely damaged, and:
Why Runway 31 Mattered So Much:
Runway 31 is LaGuardia’s primary instrument approach runway — the runway used for the majority of landings in low-visibility and instrument meteorological conditions. Losing Runway 31 meant:
The Six-Day Cumulative Disaster:
Across Days 1-5, approximately 2,194 cancellations and 1,879 delays — some 4,073 total disruptions — were recorded at LaGuardia directly attributable to the single-runway constraint. An estimated 450,000+ passengers had their travel plans disrupted, hundreds of thousands of dollars in travel expenses were incurred, and the cascading effect on connecting airports (Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Toronto, Washington) created a Northeast aviation crisis unlike anything seen since the February 2026 Winter Storm Hernando.
Today: Runway 31 Reopens — What Changes:
The NTSB has completed its on-site evidence collection on the runway debris field and has cleared Runway 31 for operational resumption. Starting today:
✈️ LGA returns to dual-runway capability: The 35% capacity constraint is lifted ✈️ Arrival rates: Returning toward 70-80/hour from 45-50/hour ✈️ Instrument approaches: Both runways available — aircraft can use optimal approach based on wind ✈️ BUT: The morning bank (which generated today’s 652 disruptions) was already planned on single-runway assumptions ✈️ Full benefit: Tomorrow (Easter Sunday) and beyond — today’s disruptions were already locked in by this morning
The NTSB Investigation — What’s Still Unknown:
The ATC investigation is ongoing. The ATC controller’s own words — “I messed up” — were captured on audio recordings as the collision unfolded. A single controller was handling both ground and air traffic simultaneously — a staffing and workload assignment that is central to the NTSB’s preliminary findings. The investigation will take 12-18 months to complete. The FAA is reviewing ATC staffing protocols at LGA immediately.
The Human Tragedy Behind the Statistics:
Every one of the 4,073 disruptions at LaGuardia this week has a human story — a family separated, a business deal missed, an Easter gathering delayed. But at the center of this week’s crisis are the families of two Jazz Aviation pilots who will never come home. As LaGuardia resumes normal operations today, those families remain in grief, and every traveler frustrated by their delayed Easter Saturday flight can spare a moment for the human cost behind this week’s aviation emergency.
Airlines hit: American, Southwest, United Express (Republic), Delta via connections
Why Chicago matters from LGA: LGA → ORD is one of the most-travelled domestic corridors in the US — Chicago-based executives commuting to New York, family connections, and the LGA → ORD → connecting flight chain that links New York to the entire Midwest. Every delayed LGA → ORD departure today breaks onward Chicago connections.
The Irony: Chicago O’Hare itself recorded 552 disruptions yesterday (March 27 — covered in our separate article). Today the FAA Summer 2026 cap takes effect at ORD (2,800 daily operations maximum). The LGA → ORD route is experiencing disruption pressure from both ends simultaneously.
Airlines hit: American shuttle, Delta shuttle, Republic/American Eagle, Southwest
Why Boston matters from LGA: LGA → BOS is among the world’s busiest short-haul routes — the New York-Boston corridor is operated at near-30-minute frequency during peak hours by American and Delta shuttles. Freezing rain at LGA disrupts every outbound Boston shuttle — and Boston’s own cold weather may be creating similar conditions at BOS, creating a two-airport icing delay situation on the Northeast’s most important corridor.
Amtrak alternative: LGA passengers with cancelled BOS connections should check Amtrak Acela from Penn Station (New York) → Back Bay/South Station (Boston) — 3.5-4 hours, multiple daily departures, may be faster door-to-door than waiting for a rebooked LGA flight today.
Airlines hit: Republic/American Eagle, Delta, Southwest
Why Detroit matters from LGA: LGA → DTW connects New York’s large Michigan-origin community with their home state — particularly relevant on Easter weekend when families travel. Republic’s regional jets handle much of the LGA → DTW volume, and as the most disrupted carrier of the six-day LGA crisis, Republic’s DTW service is today under maximum pressure.
Airlines hit: Republic/Jazz Aviation trans-border, Air Canada, Porter, Delta connection
Why Toronto matters from LGA: LGA → YYZ is one of the busiest US-Canada cross-border routes, connecting New York’s large Canadian diaspora community with Toronto. The Air Canada crash (Jazz Aviation-operated flight) adds a particularly dark resonance to today’s LGA → YYZ disruptions — Jazz Aviation is an Air Canada Express operator, and its flight was the one that collided with the fire truck six days ago. Today, Jazz Aviation is continuing to operate reduced LGA → Canadian city service as the carrier continues its own crash recovery operations.
Canadian rights note: LGA → YYZ passengers are covered by both US DOT rules (for the US departure) AND Canadian APPR rules (on arrival in Canada). If your LGA → YYZ flight is cancelled for a reason within the airline’s control, both sets of compensation rules may apply.
Today’s 652 disruptions — the worst single LGA disruption day since March 25’s 698 — have created rebooking chaos across LaGuardia’s two main terminal buildings during Easter Saturday peak travel.
Terminal A (Southwest + other carriers):
✈️ Southwest’s LGA gates: Delays across all morning Southwest departures ✈️ Rebooking: Southwest app fastest — no change fees, same-day rebooking at no cost ✈️ Queue: Southwest gate agents managing high volume of delay inquiries — use app first
Terminal B (American Airlines + American Eagle):
✈️ American’s 2022 terminal: LGA’s newest facility — but modern terminal can’t fix freezing rain ✈️ American’s disruptions concentrated here: Counter queues building from 8:00 AM onward ✈️ Republic/American Eagle desk: Go to AMERICAN AIRLINES counter, not Republic desk — more rebooking authority ✈️ Security: TSA checkpoint at Terminal B — 2-3 hour wait reported this morning (Day 43 shutdown)
Terminal C (Delta Air Lines):
✈️ Delta’s terminal: Delta Sky Club accessible with Medallion status or Priority Pass/Amex Platinum ✈️ Delta shuttle chaos: BOS and DCA shuttle passengers facing 60-90 minute delays ✈️ Delta counter: Moderate queue — 30-45 minutes with app rebooking as faster alternative
Passenger Count Math:
Easter Saturday Rebooking Availability:
Easter Saturday is among the highest-demand travel days of the year at LGA. Passengers trying to rebook today’s cancelled flights face:
With LGA at 652 disruptions, New York’s other two major airports — John F. Kennedy International (JFK) and Newark Liberty (EWR) — are today’s alternative options for disrupted LGA passengers.
John F. Kennedy International (JFK):
✈️ Distance from LGA: Approximately 12 miles (20-35 minutes by taxi/Uber in normal traffic) ✈️ Access: AirTrain from Jamaica Station (LIRR or E/J/Z subway) → JFK terminal ✈️ Cost: Taxi $35-55 + tolls; Uber $30-50 (surge possible today); AirTrain+subway $10.75 ✈️ Best for: International connections, JetBlue domestic, Delta international, American international ✈️ Today’s JFK status: Check FlightAware (flightaware.com/live/airport/KJFK) — JFK also has some freezing rain impact but not at LGA’s severity ✈️ Key advantage: JFK operates trans-Atlantic services LGA cannot — if rebooking internationally, JFK is your only NYC option
Newark Liberty International (EWR):
✈️ Distance from LGA: Approximately 17 miles (30-50 minutes depending on traffic + Lincoln Tunnel/Holland Tunnel) ✈️ Access: NJ Transit from Penn Station (Manhattan) → Newark Airport station → AirTrain to terminals ✈️ Cost: NJ Transit + AirTrain ~$15; Taxi $60-85; Uber $50-75 (surge likely today) ✈️ Best for: United Airlines hub (United’s Newark operations very strong), international departures ✈️ Today’s EWR status: United’s Newark hub — check united.com for EWR alternatives to your LGA destination ✈️ Key advantage: United’s global hub — EWR → Europe, Middle East, Asia options not available at LGA
How to Request Alternative Airport Rebooking:
CRITICAL — Today’s Unique Triple Threat Requires Specific Tactics:
Threat 1: Freezing Rain + De-Icing (adds 30-60 minutes to EVERY flight) Threat 2: TSA Day 43 (2-3 hour security lines — you can miss a flight without ANY delays) Threat 3: Easter Saturday Peak (near-zero same-day rebooking availability)
Before You Leave for LGA:
If You’re Currently at LGA:
Specific Phone Numbers:
✈️ American Airlines (American + American Eagle): 1-800-433-7300 ✈️ Delta Air Lines: 1-800-221-1212 ✈️ Southwest Airlines: 1-800-435-9792 ✈️ United Airlines (United Express/Republic): 1-800-864-8331 ✈️ JetBlue Airways: 1-800-538-2583 ✈️ US DOT Consumer Line: 1-202-366-2220 (if airline refuses DOT-required refund)
Short answer: Today is Day 6’s last bad day. Tomorrow looks significantly better.
Saturday March 28 Afternoon/Evening:
Easter Sunday March 29:
The Week Ahead:
With Runway 31 operational from today, LGA returns to its normal operational profile for the first time since March 23. The Air Canada disaster’s direct runway impact ends today. Residual crew displacement from Republic and Endeavor Air will take 2-3 additional days to fully clear. TSA shutdown continues with no congressional resolution before April 10.
March 2026 will go into LaGuardia’s aviation history as its most disruptive single month in modern operations:
| Event | Dates | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Winter Storm Hernando | Feb 22-26 | ~1,200 LGA disruptions over 4 days |
| Air Canada Crash | March 23-28 | ~4,073 LGA disruptions over 6 days |
| TODAY | March 28 | 652 (Day 6’s final major chapter) |
The Air Canada crash recovery has now surpassed Winter Storm Hernando as the most disruptive LGA event of 2026 — and it is a human tragedy, not a weather event, at its core.
LaGuardia Airport’s 523 delays + 129 cancellations = 652 total disruptions on Easter Saturday March 28, 2026 represent the climactic final chapter of a six-day Air Canada disaster recovery that has now produced approximately 4,073 total LGA disruptions and stranded an estimated 450,000+ passengers since Jazz Aviation Flight 8646 collided with a Port Authority fire truck on Runway 31 at 11:40 PM on March 23 — killing two pilots and triggering the airport’s longest sustained operational crisis of the modern era — as today’s freezing rain and single-digit wind chills force mandatory de-icing treatment on every departing aircraft (adding 30-60 minutes per flight), severe cold limits ground crew outdoor exposure times (slowing every ramp operation), and icing on jet bridges forces slower boarding procedures, while American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, and Republic Airways all absorb the double impact of weather-driven delays and the six-day crew/aircraft displacement cascade from LGA’s 35% capacity loss under single-runway operations — hitting routes to Chicago O’Hare, Boston Logan, Detroit Metropolitan, and Toronto Pearson as TSA Day 43 extends security lines to 2-3 hours at LGA checkpoints, Easter Saturday brings peak passenger volumes with near-zero same-day rebooking availability, and Runway 31 finally reopens today — too late to prevent this morning’s 652-disruption catastrophe, but in time to restore LaGuardia to full capacity for Easter Sunday and the week ahead.
For travelers: Arrive 4 hours before departure TODAY — 2-3 hours TSA + 30-60 minute de-icing means 90 minutes is NOT enough. Join security queue immediately upon arrival — no shopping or eating until you’re through. American Eagle/United Express passengers: go to American or United counter, NOT Republic desk. Cancelled flight: insist on full cash refund OR rebooking — not a travel credit. Consider JFK (12 miles, AirTrain from Jamaica) or Newark EWR (NJ Transit from Penn Station) as alternatives. Call airlines before driving to JFK or EWR to confirm alternative availability. Southwest passengers: app rebooking is free, no change fees, fastest option. Check travel waiver eligibility on airline website — LGA waivers may still apply. Monday March 30 is your best rebooking target — Easter Sunday near-fully booked. Runway 31 reopens today — tomorrow will be significantly better.
652 disruptions. 129 cancellations. 523 delays. Freezing rain. Single-digit wind chills. De-icing on every plane. TSA Day 43. Easter Saturday peak. Runway 31 reopens — but the damage is done. LaGuardia’s worst week of 2026 ends today. 450,000 passengers later.
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Posted By : Vinay
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