NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Wednesday, April 30, 2014, 7:43 PM
Air traffic came to an abrupt halt in the southwest after a "ground stop" was issued because of computer issues, forcing several planes to be diverted, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
CBS SF reported that two planes flying from San Francisco to Los Angeles were forced to completely turn back over the 3 p.m. EST-issued order which authorities said only prevented planes from taking off.
"The FAA's Los Angeles Center air traffic control facility experienced technical issues and stopped accepting additional flights into the airspace managed by the facility for about an hour," the FAA said in a statement to the Daily News.
"Some flights were diverted and the agency issued a nationwide ground stop for flights heading into the airspace managed by the center. The agency is gradually restoring the system."
By 7 p.m. the issue appeared to have been largely resolved, with airports including Los Angeles International — the nation's third-busiest airport — announcing flights resuming, however with an hour delay.
Other airports affected included the Bob Hope Airport, John Wayne Airport, Ontario Airport, as well as airports in Las Vegas, Phoenix and Salt Lake City.
Source: southwest - Google News http://ift.tt/1rTqaS5
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