Predawn Storms Paralyze Bush Airport, Travelers Stuck In Sky-High Gridlock

Thunderstorms barreling through Houston before sunrise Sunday put George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) on pause, as the FAA ordered a ground stop that froze departures and tangled morning travel for one of the country’s busiest hubs.

According to Click2Houston, the FAA alert said departures bound for IAH were halted from 6 a.m. to 8:15 a.m. CDT and tagged the stoppage with a medium (30–60%) chance of being extended. While passengers were still draining their first cups of coffee, airlines were already scrambling behind the scenes to reshuffle morning schedules as planes stacked up at origin airports.

The FAA’s airport-status page listed the reason simply as “thunderstorms” and showed an expected end time of about 7:15 a.m. CDT, according to the FAA. The advisory went up early Sunday as NOAA radar tracked a line of storms sweeping through the Houston metro, leaving air-traffic managers to meter arrivals and protect ramp crews from lightning.

Impact on Flights and Travelers

Flight tracking data showed inbound delays and short holding patterns as the system slowly absorbed the pause, with FlightAware listing average arrival delays of about 33 minutes during the advisory window. That ripple effect meant some connecting passengers missed their onward flights, and airlines began rebooking affected customers as the morning bank of departures tried to reset…

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