After Jayne Levinson, a teacher from Marlboro, New Jersey, heard about the London bombings on Thursday, she said she was "very scared." But despite pleas from her daughter, Elissa, 14, to cancel their British Airways flight to London from Newark, she decided to go.
"I feel that it's safer now than before," Levinson, 42, said on Thursday while awaiting the flight at Newark Liberty International Airport.
"It's not our time to go, and God is on our side. And we have to think positive," she said.
The airline industry is trying to think positive, too. But on Thursday, that did not seem easy.
European routes are among the airlines' most profitable. And even though London's airports remained open throughout the attacks, the bombings could have a deeper impact -- at least in the near term -- on the airline industry than last year's train bombings in Madrid did.
London's airports feed more traffic to the rest of Europe than those in Madrid do. Industry officials and analysts worried that high-paying business travelers would postpone trips, afraid that what happened in the British capital was only the beginning of a wave of terror attacks.
"Carriers like American, Continental and Northwest, which have a lot of flights going to London, are going to take a hit," said Michael Boyd, president of the Boyd Group Inc, an aviation consulting business. He estimated that bookings to London by the nation's airlines would drop 3 percent to 5 percent immediately after the attacks.
"It will be a dent in the fender, but not a big enough dent to send them into bankruptcy," he said.
Although the setback is unlikely to do permanent damage to an improving airline industry, company executives want to make sure that the dent to their business is small and short-lived. So, a number of airlines flying to Europe loosened their cancellation policies on Thursday to accommodate transatlantic travelers with second thoughts. Airlines waived some cancellation fees and issued vouchers for future flights to passengers who wanted to stay home. Although few cancellations were reported, analysts expect more.
"It's unfortunate for the airlines, because the transatlantic has been one of the bright spots in their business, and we're right in the middle of the principal travel season for flying to Europe," said Philip Baggaley, a senior airline credit analyst at Standard & Poor's.
Andrew Frank, a communications consultant from New York, was scheduled to fly to Moscow on British Airways on Thursday afternoon, with a stopover in London.
"I heard that there might be some disruptions in London, and I didn't want to take a chance," he said. So he paid US$2,000 for a direct flight on Delta Air Lines.
Business travelers appeared to be reacting to the bombings with greater concern than vacationers.
Robert Burke, a technology consultant in Miami, is set to vacation in Ireland next month with his son and daughter. He said the bombings had the opposite of their intended effect.
"When I heard about what happened in London, I said to my son, `Let's go to London to show our solidarity,'" he said.
TYPHOON: The storm’s path indicates a high possibility of Krathon making landfall in Pingtung County, depending on when the storm turns north, the CWA said Typhoon Krathon is strengthening and is more likely to make landfall in Taiwan, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said in a forecast released yesterday afternoon. As of 2pm yesterday, the CWA’s updated sea warning for Krathon showed that the storm was about 430km southeast of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), Taiwan’s southernmost point. It was moving in west-northwest at 9kph, with maximum sustained winds of 119kph and gusts of up to 155kph, CWA data showed. Krathon is expected to move further west before turning north tomorrow, CWA forecaster Wu Wan-hua (伍婉華) said. The CWA’s latest forecast and other countries’ projections of the storm’s path indicate a higher
SLOW-MOVING STORM: The typhoon has started moving north, but at a very slow pace, adding uncertainty to the extent of its impact on the nation Work and classes have been canceled across the nation today because of Typhoon Krathon, with residents in the south advised to brace for winds that could reach force 17 on the Beaufort scale as the Central Weather Administration (CWA) forecast that the storm would make landfall there. Force 17 wind with speeds of 56.1 to 61.2 meters per second, the highest number on the Beaufort scale, rarely occur and could cause serious damage. Krathon could be the second typhoon to land in southwestern Taiwan, following typhoon Elsie in 1996, CWA records showed. As of 8pm yesterday, the typhoon’s center was 180km
TYPHOON DAY: Taitung, Pingtung, Tainan, Chiayi, Hualien and Kaohsiung canceled work and classes today. The storm is to start moving north this afternoon The outer rim of Typhoon Krathon made landfall in Taitung County and the Hengchun Peninsula (恆春半島) at about noon yesterday, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said, adding that the eye of the storm was expected to hit land tomorrow. The CWA at 2:30pm yesterday issued a land alert for Krathon after issuing a sea alert on Sunday. It also expanded the scope of the sea alert to include waters north of Taiwan Strait, in addition to its south, from the Bashi Channel to the Pratas Islands (Dongsha Islands, 東沙群島). As of 6pm yesterday, the typhoon’s center was 160km south of
STILL DANGEROUS: The typhoon was expected to weaken, but it would still maintain its structure, with high winds and heavy rain, the weather agency said One person had died amid heavy winds and rain brought by Typhoon Krathon, while 70 were injured and two people were unaccounted for, the Central Emergency Operation Center said yesterday, while work and classes have been canceled nationwide today for the second day. The Hualien County Fire Department said that a man in his 70s had fallen to his death at about 11am on Tuesday while trimming a tree at his home in Shoufeng Township (壽豐). Meanwhile, the Yunlin County Fire Department received a report of a person falling into the sea at about 1pm on Tuesday, but had to suspend search-and-rescue