Dust-Choked Monsoon Brings Sky Harbor To A Sudden Halt

A line of monsoon storms and a thick dust plume triggered a temporary ground stop at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Sunday, freezing inbound flights and sharply cutting visibility across the Valley. The pause scrambled arrival schedules and left travelers dealing with delays while airport and airline crews worked to get operations back on track.

According to AZFamily, Phoenix Sky Harbor was placed under a ground stop Sunday after storms pushed across the area. Per Phoenix Sky Harbor, several flights were delayed while controllers held inbound airplanes until visibility improved.

FAA Advisory And How Ground Stops Work

The FAA’s Air Traffic Control System Command Center had already flagged PHX for possible constraints ahead of the front, listing a “PHX ground stop possible” in its operations plan, as posted by the ATCSCC. As the FAA explains in its operations guidance, ground stops pause flights at their departure airports until controllers can safely accept arrivals, and the agency’s publications outline how those pauses are coordinated during severe weather.

Weather And Visibility Problems

National Weather Service products showed blowing dust and thunderstorm warnings across parts of the region as the line moved through, conditions that can drop visibility to hazardous levels. The agency cautions drivers to “Pull Aside, Stay Alive” during near-zero visibility dust events, and those fast-changing conditions are often the immediate trigger for temporary airport holds; see the National Weather Service advisory.

Delays And Traveler Advice

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