logo
Fourth of July Travel Faces Delays From Storms, Heat and Fire Risk

Fourth of July Travel Faces Delays From Storms, Heat and Fire Risk

Newsweek3 days ago
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A record-breaking 72.2 million Americans are traveling for the Fourth of July holiday this year. Still, severe weather, extreme heat, and wildfire risks are threatening to derail plans across the country. According to the National Weather Service and multiple travel agencies, storms are sweeping through the Northeast, Midwest, and Southeast, while heat advisories and red flag warnings are in effect in parts of the Plains and West.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has issued ground stops at major airports, including Newark, LaGuardia, and Boston, this week. At the same time, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) expects to screen over 18.5 million air travelers between July 1 and July 7. Meanwhile, road congestion is peaking, with INRIX warning of heavy traffic through Friday afternoon.
A family looks out towards the tarmac ahead of departure at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport on July 03, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
A family looks out towards the tarmac ahead of departure at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport on July 03, 2025 in Austin, Texas.The Context
This year's Independence Day travel surge is the largest in U.S. history, driven by the holiday coinciding with a Friday and pent-up demand for summer getaways. However, the convergence of volatile weather and record crowds is creating one of the most challenging travel environments in recent memory. Flight delays, cancellations, and dangerous driving conditions could impact millions.
What To Know
Severe thunderstorms on July 3 caused ground stops at LaGuardia, Newark, and Boston Logan airports. As of Thursday evening, over 600 flights were canceled, and nearly 2,000 were delayed nationwide. The FAA warns that delays may continue into the weekend, especially in Florida and the Carolinas.
TSA Administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill said the agency is fully staffed but warned travelers to "pack their patience."
Travelers without a Real ID should expect additional screening and longer wait times.
Temperatures are 10–20°F above average in parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the Great Lakes region. Cities like Chicago, Detroit, and Burlington are under heat alerts, with highs in the 90s and heat indexes near 100°F.
Red flag warnings are in effect in Oregon, Idaho, Nevada, and Utah due to dry conditions and high winds. Wildfires have already sparked in parts of California, prompting local evacuations and the banning of fireworks.
The National Hurricane Center is monitoring a disturbance near Florida that could bring heavy rain and flooding through the weekend. Even without development, tropical moisture is expected to drench much of the state, especially on July 4.
AAA projects 61.6 million Americans will travel by car this week. INRIX recommends driving early in the morning to avoid peak congestion, which is expected from noon to 7 p.m. on July 4.
What People Are Saying
The NWS weather prediction center said on X, formerly Twitter, on Wednesday: "Hazardous heat is forecast across the Midwest and Great Lakes regions July 4-6. Heat index values are expected to reach 90-100 degrees. If you will be outdoors, be sure to hydrate and take breaks!"
The NWS also said on X on Friday: "Heat and humidity will be migrating eastwards across the Great Lakes region towards the East Coast through the Holiday weekend, with notable population centers entering the Major Heat Risk category."
What Happens Next
Storms are expected to clear in the Northeast by Friday evening, offering better conditions for fireworks and outdoor events. However, Florida and parts of the Southeast are expected to continue seeing rain through the weekend. Travelers are advised to closely monitor weather alerts and transportation updates for the most up-to-date information.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Over 5,000 Flights Disrupted In U.S. As Americans Travel Home From Holiday Weekend
Over 5,000 Flights Disrupted In U.S. As Americans Travel Home From Holiday Weekend

Forbes

time9 hours ago

  • Forbes

Over 5,000 Flights Disrupted In U.S. As Americans Travel Home From Holiday Weekend

Over 5,000 flights in the United States were delayed Sunday, primarily due to inclement weather, as Americans travel following the Independence Day weekend. Thunderstorms in the Midwest delayed flights at Chicago-O'Hare International Airport. Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. Travelers at Chicago-O'Hare faced the worst delays Sunday as thunderstorms moved across the region, with the Federal Aviation Administration estimating inbound flight delays could last more than an hour and 15 minutes. Nearly 800 flights to and from O'Hare were delayed by 5 p.m. EDT on Sunday, according to FlightAware data. Inbound flights to Reagan Washington International Airport were also delayed by an average of 40 minutes due to staffing shortages, the FAA said in an alert. The rest of the weekend also saw considerable flight delays across the country, peaking at over 9,100 on the Fourth of July. 54,706. That's how many air travelers the United States saw on Thursday, June 26—the busiest air travel day of the year so far, the FAA reported last week. The agency also predicted busy air travel days for the entire extended holiday weekend, with an expected 51,000 flights on July 3, before Independence Day. The FAA said it was expecting roughly 47,966 flights on Sunday—meaning if these predictions are correct, over 10% of all flights on Sunday were delayed as of early evening. The pace of flights being delayed accelerated throughout Sunday afternoon, according to FlightAware. Flight delays can compound later in the day due to planes not reaching their destinations on time earlier, which is often the case when there is widespread bad weather, with summertime being particularly notorious for the formation of thunderstorms that can disrupt air travel.

Trump order calls for national park fee hikes for some: What to know
Trump order calls for national park fee hikes for some: What to know

The Hill

time10 hours ago

  • The Hill

Trump order calls for national park fee hikes for some: What to know

(NEXSTAR) — Just weeks after the Department of the Interior's budget proposal for fiscal year 2026 suggested a surcharge for some national park visitors, President Donald Trump has signed an executive order calling for just that. The order, signed Thursday, directs Interior Secretary Doug Burgum to develop a 'strategy' to boost revenue and improve recreational experiences at national parks, The Hill reported last week. As part of that, entrance fees and the cost for a recreation pass are intended to rise for 'nonresidents.' International visitors do not currently pay more to visit the national parks than U.S. residents. The White House said the price hikes will make national parks more affordable for American families. Here's what we know about Trump's order and the Interior Department's budget proposal. The Department of the Interior's budget proposal for fiscal year 2026 said a surcharge will help bring in more than $90 million, but didn't outline how. 'There could be a billion-dollar revenue opportunity without discouraging visitors,' Burgum said during a House Committee on Natural Resources oversight hearing in June. He didn't expand on how the extra fee could bring in more than $90 million, and the Department did not respond to Nexstar's request for additional information last month. An analysis by SFGate, using an estimate that 14.6 million international visitors went to U.S. national parks last year, determined that if the parks saw the same number of visitors in 2026, the necessary surcharge to reach the aforementioned budget goal would be about $6 a person. 'I think we're way undercharging, as a nation, for international visitors,' Burgum said during June's oversight hearing. Burgum pointed to other international venues where Americans and other non-resident tourists are charged more than locals, like the Galapagos Islands. There, non-Ecuadorian adults must pay a $200 entrance fee, in cash, to the Galapagos National Park. The entrance fee for children is $100. Meanwhile, Ecuadorian citizens over the age of 12 pay $30 while the fee for younger citizens is $12. Citizens also have discounted or free admission to popular tourist attractions around the world. College-aged residents of the European Union have free access to several museums within member countries, including the Louvre and The Orsay Museum in Paris. Tourists pay over 20 times more to visit the Taj Mahal than local residents do. Hawaii will begin charging a 'Green Fee' tourist tax next year in order to generate funds for mitigating future environmental challenges the state expects to face. Chicago's Field Museum offers discounted admission to city residents. Residents of the state of New York are able to pay whatever they prefer to visit The Metropolitan Museum of Art, though they are required to pay at least one penny per ticket. Even Disney World and Disneyland offer deals for those who live near their parks. Regarding international visitors at national parks, Trump's order calls for increased fees for foreign visitors, as well as a price hike for the America the Beautiful Pass and 'any site-specific agency or regional multi-entity passes' that are sold to foreign visitors. The America the Beautiful Pass is currently available at various price points and provides free entrance into national parks and federal recreational lands. An annual pass, available to 'everyone,' is $80. A senior annual pass is $20, while a senior lifetime pass is $80. Others may qualify for a free annual or lifetime pass. The price hikes, according to Trump's order, apply only to those parks that charge entrance or recreation pass fees. Currently, only 106 of the 475 sites that are managed by the National Park Service charge an entrance fee. Neither Trump's executive order nor the Interior Department's budget outlined how much entrance and pass fees could rise. Increased revenue from nonresident visitors would then be used to 'improve the infrastructure of, or otherwise enhance enjoyment of or access to, America's Federal recreational areas.' While the foreign visitor fees could bring in more revenue for the parks, the Trump administration has also proposed cutting the National Park Service's staffing budgets and service operations by 30 percent, The Hill reports. Meanwhile, the Interior Department's budget proposal is requesting $2 billion for the national parks, down more than $1 billion from the current budget. It would be the largest cut in NPS history, according to the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA). Nonetheless, Trump's order calls for efforts to increase visitor capacity at America's national parks, invest in infrastructure at the sites, and improve park access to American families by ensuring they 'receive priority access in any permitting or reservation systems.' The National Park Service had its biggest year of attendance in 2024, with more than two dozen sites seeing record visitation.

Getting to Europe is cheaper this summer — but everything costs more when you're there
Getting to Europe is cheaper this summer — but everything costs more when you're there

CNBC

time10 hours ago

  • CNBC

Getting to Europe is cheaper this summer — but everything costs more when you're there

A last-minute summer flight to London or Rome costs less than it did a year ago, but the good news ends at the customs checkpoint. U.S. travelers to the U.K. and Europe are finding their dollars don't go as far as they did just months ago. Exchange rates haven't been kind to Americans abroad this year. The dollar index — which tracks the greenback against a handful of other major currencies — has plunged 10.3% so far this year, its worst half-year performance since 1973, largely due to President Donald Trump's ongoing global trade war. While some analysts expect a partial rebound later this month, €1 now buys only about $0.85 today, versus $0.93 a year ago. In Britain, £1 fetches some $0.73, about 6 cents less than in early July 2024. Some of the currency swings have been quite recent. A ticket to a London play that cost £100, or about $135, at the beginning of June would cost $137 now. A three-night Barcelona hotel bill of €850, about $965 a month ago, will set you back $1,002 today. Fortunately, cheaper airfares are cushioning the blow. Tickets to Europe and Asia are down 10% and 13%, respectively, since last year at this time and have returned to pre-pandemic pricing, according to the booking platform Hopper. And travel experts at recently found some of the lowest-ever deals for certain flights to Sydney, Rio de Janeiro and Dublin this fall. Many consumers appear to be taking advantage of bargain tickets. Even as international travelers pull back on visiting the U.S., Americans are venturing abroad. Travel volumes among U.S. citizens returning home at major airports' passport control were up about 2% over the 28 days through June 21 since the same period a year ago, according to Tourism Economics, a market research firm. While budget considerations are affecting who's deciding to vacation abroad and how to spend when they do, consumer finance experts and travel industry analysts say broader economic uncertainty is playing a bigger role. "If you're going to cancel an international trip, it's not going to be because of the dollar," said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate. "It's going to be because you're worried about getting laid off, you're worried about geopolitical issues, or don't have the money saved up and the only way to pay for it is to put it on the credit card and finance it at 20% interest." For any travelers with heartburn over the weaker dollar, McBride noted that it "still compares pretty favorably to levels we saw in 2021, and it's still better than pretty much anytime between 2003 and 2014." Indeed, Tourism Economics found travel spending by U.S. residents abroad rose 8.6% in the first four months of the year from the same period a year earlier. "This indicates continued U.S. outbound demand," the firm said. While the economy and household finances always influence travel demand, "today those factors are looking to have more of a negative impact than positive one," said Nicki Zink, deputy head of industry analysis at the market research firm Morning Consult. In the group's recent survey, 31% of consumers said both the state of the U.S. economy and personal financial pressures are reducing their interest in leisure travel in the next three months, "higher than any other factor we survey about," said Zink. For its own part, the tourism market research firm Future Partners found 47% of American travelers are likely to venture abroad in the next 12 months, but 35% said uncertainty around U.S. policy changes had already caused them to reconsider or delay those plans. And in a NerdWallet survey last month, 11% of consumers said they'd scrapped international travel plans this year over global relations or economic uncertainty. Plenty of Americans are still packing their passports, though. Millennials, for example, "are increasingly considering international destinations, despite the higher cost compared with domestic trips," said Zink, adding that interest in destinations across South and Central America, the Caribbean and northern Europe have risen this year. Wealthy travelers are also still traveling with gusto, extending a trend that has intensified since the recovery from the pandemic. "Our affluent clients are still going after those bucket-list adventures and once-in-a-lifetime experiences," said Mandee Migliaccio, CEO of the New Jersey-based agency Stepping Out Travel Services. "While they're definitely keeping an eye on the headlines, they typically won't change plans unless a destination really becomes unstable." Migliaccio acknowledged she has seen some subtle shifts lately, with some clients asking to trim flight costs or deciding to skip a stop to keep things more efficient. "It's not so much 'I can't go' as it is, 'How can I make this work for me?'" she said. "People are being strategic, spending where it matters most, and opting for curated experiences over excess."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store