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Spring Break, a Monster Storm, and Understaffed Airports — All at Once

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Published Mar 16, 2026
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A Monster Storm with a monstrous face approaches an understaffed airport, causing chaos outside while passengers’ luggage is scattered inside the terminal.
Summary:

  • More than 3,500 flights were canceled Monday and nearly 7,000 delayed as a massive storm swept from the Midwest to the East Coast.
  • The disruption hit during peak spring break travel, with airports crowded with families, students, and March Madness fans.
  • A partial government shutdown has left TSA agents working without pay since February 14, straining security staffing at already overwhelmed checkpoints.

Somebody picked a very bad week to fly.

The Storm

A powerful system dropped blizzard conditions across the Midwest over the weekend before barreling toward the East Coast on Monday. Green Bay, Wisconsin recorded 14.8 inches of snow — its snowiest day in 137 years. Parts of Michigan saw 26 inches. Tornado warnings were issued across Georgia, North Carolina, and Virginia.

By Monday afternoon, FlightAware tracked more than 3,500 cancellations and nearly 7,000 delays within, into, or out of the U.S. Chicago O'Hare had nearly 500 cancellations. Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson and New York's JFK each had more than 300. American Airlines led all carriers with over 500 canceled flights, followed by Southwest with more than 400 and Delta with more than 400.

FOX Weather reported more than 6,500 total cancellations nationwide through Tuesday as the system continues moving east.

The Worst Timing Possible

The storm landed squarely in the middle of spring break — one of the busiest travel weeks of the year — and overlaps with March Madness, sending basketball fans to arenas across the country. Airlines were already running full schedules before a single flake fell.

One traveler told the AP she was stranded in St. Louis on her way home to Tampa after a Vegas weekend. The only available rebook put her in Tennessee first, arriving home Tuesday afternoon.

The TSA Problem

The disruptions are unfolding as a partial government shutdown — now in its second month — has left TSA screeners working without pay since February 14. Staffing has thinned at some checkpoints, and security wait times have surged past two hours at major airports even in cities not directly hit by the storm.

Most major airlines have issued travel waivers allowing fee-free rebooking. The storm is expected to clear the East Coast by Wednesday — which is cold comfort if you're sleeping on an airport floor tonight.

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