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US blizzard puts crimp in holiday sales, travel

Cold snap strands thousands of European travellers
Paris (AFP) Dec 20, 2009 - Tens of thousands of European travellers were stranded Sunday in rail stations, traffic jams and airports as heavy snow and ice caused massive disruption at the start of the Christmas holiday season. At least 19 people froze to death, mainly in Poland and mostly homeless people or drinkers caught out in temperatures that were glacial across Europe, plunging as low as minus 33 Celsius (minus 27 Fahrenheit) in parts of Germany. Forecasters across the continent are expecting more snow and freezing rain over the next couple of days, but with temperatures rising slightly and the outlook gradually improving in the run-up to Christmas Day on Friday. Roads and railways were closed or disrupted by snow, black ice or floods across northern and western Europe from Portugal to the Netherlands, and flights from British, Belgian, Dutch, French and German airports delayed. The most embarrassing scenes for transport operators hit cross-Channel transport between Britain and France, after the Eurostar passenger service from London to Paris was shut down following at least five breakdowns.

Eurostar, the operator of the Channel Tunnel passenger trains, admitted it could not say when services would resume, with more than 24,000 passengers attempting inter-city travel ahead of the Christmas break stranded. The company said it would send test trains along the route to see if they can withstand the sub-zero temperatures in northern France, which are thought to have caused trains to break down in the tunnel late Friday. "We did run two or three trains yesterday, they all got through the tunnel OK, but one or two of them showed symptoms of the problem that happened on Friday night," Eurostar director Richard Brown told the BBC. French Euro MP Dominique Baudis said he would call for the European Commission to investigate after he and his family were among those stuck. "The chain of events was an aberration. Eurostar's complete inertia was scandalous," he said, accusing the train operating firm of abandoning its passengers to their fate.

More than 2,000 passengers spent Friday night trapped in the undersea tunnel, some without anything to eat or drink. There were reports of heated disputes on board and some passengers bitterly criticised the company. Approach roads to the ports of Dover and Calais were snarled by tail-backs because of heavy snow and queues of trucks waiting for delayed shuttle trains through the Channel Tunnel. "Eurotunnel has advised us that waiting times are up to two hours at the terminal," Kent police Superintendent Matthew Nix said, warning car and truck drivers without reservations to stay away. At Paris Charles de Gaulle airport 40 percent of flights were cancelled and the remaining services were leaving an average of one hour late, while the city's second airport Orly was the scene of a strike by security staff. In the Belgian capital Brussels a flight was able to leave just after sunrise for Seville in Spain, but afterwards heavy snow forced authorities to halt all flights from airports in Brussels, Liege and Charleroi. "We're putting everything into clearing the runway as quickly as possible, but it all depends on how the weather develops," a Brussels airport spokesman told AFP. Heavy snowfall also closed Germany's third largest airport in the western city of Duesseldorf, authorities said, and in the Netherlands a dozen flights from Amsterdam Schipol were cancelled. International Thalys trains between Brussels, Paris and Amsterdam were also delayed and Sunday football matches were cancelled as far south as Italy and across much of the north.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 20, 2009
Americans pining for a white Christmas got more than they bargained for as a record-breaking snowstorm closed airports and roadways across the northeastern United States, putting a damper on the holiday's biggest shopping weekend.

Just days before the December 25 holiday, the eastern seaboard from North Carolina to New England was digging out Sunday from the worst blizzard in years, which closed train and bus service, paralyzed air traffic and left hundreds of thousands of residents without power in some areas.

Many churches canceled Sunday services, as local officials urged residents to hunker down indoors as record snowfall wreaked havoc on the roadways.

And the storm was a blow to the already reeling retail sector, which had been counting on cash registers loudly ringing on the Saturday before Christmas -- traditionally the busiest shopping day of the year -- to make up for weeks of lackluster sales.

"I think we can safely say that sales in the Washington region were crippled," Ellen Davis, vice president of the National Retail Federation, told AFP.

She said the impact of the inclement weather went far beyond just making it harder for customers to snap up holiday gifts.

Without shoppers out and about at shopping malls and along America's high streets "people weren't eating at restaurants, there wasn't any impulse buying," Davis said.

With some 15 billion dollars of all nationwide sales occurring on the last weekend before Christmas, many shoppers trying to make up for lost time were likely to confront closes stores, unplowed roads and limited transportation options.

But Davis said the impact of the blizzard on Christmas shopping would be felt differently across the country, depending on when the storm hit.

While Washington, which received a total of 16 inches (40 centimeters) of snow, woke up Saturday swathed in a deep white blanket under clear skies, the flakes were flying at the same time in New York and points north.

"What we heard in New York is that couple of flurries get people more in the spirit of shopping," Davis told AFP.

As the monster storm barreled northward, the National Weather Service on Sunday posted blizzard warnings for southern New England, including Boston.

"Heavy snow and strong winds could potentially cause localized whiteout conditions along the New England coast through early Sunday afternoon," the NWS said, predicting "local amounts of up to two feet (61 centimeters) possible where heavy snow persists the longest."

The storm at one point stretched some 500 miles (800 kilometers) across a dozen states, affecting around a quarter of the US population.

Much of the East Coast, home to tens of millions of Americans, turned into a winter wonderland, even if the conditions were as perilous as they were scenic.

The NWS said it was the heaviest snow storm ever to hit the US capital region so early in December, in an area where snow does not usually fall until January or later, if at all.

Three people died on Virginia roads Saturday as some 3,000 accidents shut down interstates for several hours, according to the state's department of emergency management. The Virginia Department of Health confirmed one other storm-related death.

And bus service around the region ground as road remained in many places slippery at best and in other places totally unplowed, making movement still difficult, hours after the storm had moved on.

"There are huge piles of snow lining the edges of streets and blocking the bus stops," said John Catoe, the general manager of the Metropolitan Transit Authority.

The transit authority also operates the area's regional subway system in Washington, Virginia and Maryland ran trains underground train service only, closing 39 of the system's 86 stations.

Service slowly returned to the capital region's main airports after hundreds of flights were canceled Saturday, stranding thousands of passengers on one of the busiest travel weekends of the year.

The annual year-end holiday travel season that official began Saturday, December 19 and continues through Saturday, January 2, just after the New Year's holiday.

Meanwhile, Davis said that resourceful shoppers, rather than deferring their holiday purchases, likely would make up for lost time this week in the last few shopping days before Christmas on Friday.

"You might see more people choose to purchase gift cards," she said. "I would imagine there were people online all day yesterday as opposed to being out" at the shopping malls, she said.

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Eurostar services cancelled after travellers stranded
London (AFP) Dec 19, 2009
Eurostar passengers faced more chaos as the company axed its services for Sunday, causing fresh turmoil for train travellers after more than 2,000 spent a night trapped in the Channel Tunnel. The decision followed dramatic scenes overnight into Saturday, when hundreds on the service linking Britain to France spent a desperate night stranded under the sea on the pre-Christmas weekend, one of ... read more







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