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Chicago Tribune
Chicago Tribune
Business
Gregory Karp

Mythbuster: Thanksgiving Eve not busiest for air travel

Nov. 26--Wednesday was not the busiest air travel day of the year, no matter how many times it's repeated on TV news.

In fact, the busiest travel day for flying this year in America will be Sunday, as Thanksgiving travelers return home after the holiday.

At Chicago airports, many days see heavier airport traffic than the day before Thanksgiving, according to FAA statistics.

That's not to say Wednesday wasn't full of hassles for many travelers. Winter storms on the East Coast conspired to make flying miserable. By midday Wednesday, 1,251 flights nationwide were canceled, the vast majority at airports near New York City and Philadelphia, according to FlightAware.

But repeating the mantra that Thanksgiving Eve is the busiest air travel day doesn't make it so.

The U.S. Travel Association earlier this month bemoaned the crowded state of U.S. airports by using the day before Thanksgiving as the benchmark for travel hell in a study it released called "Thanksgiving in the Skies."

It said the study "measured how soon the average day at U.S. airports would resemble the Wednesday before Thanksgiving -- notoriously one of the most strenuous air travel days of the year."

But according to several sources, including airline industry group Airlines for America, Sunday this year will be the busiest day for air travelers.

That holds true for Chicago, according to the Chicago Department of Aviation. The agency reported that Sunday will be the busiest day at both O'Hare International and Midway airports, which expect to see a total of 300,000 passengers.

Chicago airport traffic on Thanksgiving Eve can be pretty average. For example, at O'Hare last year, Nov. 27 -- the day before Thanksgiving -- ranked as the 169th busiest day of the year in terms of number of flights, according to flight data from the Federal Aviation Administration.

Of course poor weather, especially in the area of major airports, can disrupt flights nationwide on any day, which is exactly what happened Wednesday.

gkarp@tribpub.com

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