For a Class C as an example. Does the local ATC facility issue and end ground stops at their discretion or is it something that Center is in control of?
For a Class C as an example. Does the local ATC facility issue and end ground stops at their discretion or is it something that Center is in control of?
It’s the FAA, what do you expect?Christ. It's 2018 and that webpage looks like someone put together some HTML from the '90's to wrap some terminal output. Who writes crap like that anymore? The page is mostly opaque.
Those damned Feds!
So, as we trudged down the concourse, scrambling to figure out (1) how we'd get home, and (2) where we'd stay the night, we couldn't help but notice the flights to DFW on Frontier and Spirit departing (and they arrived without issue, as the storms were long gone). How so, with an FAA-issued ground stop?
I looked up the ground stop, and it was definitely there. It was applicable only to AA flights, and in the notes, it said, "AAL Request."
One time, we were in Denver waiting on an AA flight to DFW. Flights were disrupted because of severe WX in north Texas (totally legit, a vicious line of storms passing west to east, as is the norm here).
The AA rep announced that the flight (along with two others) was canceled, "because the FAA has issued a ground-stop, and no flights are allowed to depart for DFW."
Those damned Feds!
So, as we trudged down the concourse, scrambling to figure out (1) how we'd get home, and (2) where we'd stay the night, we couldn't help but notice the flights to DFW on Frontier and Spirit departing (and they arrived without issue, as the storms were long gone). How so, with an FAA-issued ground stop?
I looked up the ground stop, and it was definitely there. It was applicable only to AA flights, and in the notes, it said, "AAL Request."
For a Class C as an example. Does the local ATC facility issue and end ground stops at their discretion or is it something that Center is in control of?
Christ. It's 2018 and that webpage looks like someone put together some HTML from the '90's to wrap some terminal output. Who writes crap like that anymore? The page is mostly opaque.
The Airlines themselves can issue groundstops as well, for example, ramp issues and no space, DAL may request a full company ground stop, or just for regionals, or just for mainline. There seems to have been a lot of that this summer.The local facility can do it on their own, at the snap of a finger. Approach can call the Tower and say 'Hold Departures.' The Center can call and shut off traffic from Approach for awhile which results in them shutting off the Tower. This is usually the result of an emergency or some other event like everyone is dodging weather and a sector becomes 'saturated.' This usually doesn't last to long. But like @Radar Contact says, the more 'formal' ground stops that cover traffic over multiple facilities are done as he describes.
Yes it is simple html codes, which is what's nice about it. It loads fast, and will work on any browser, including text-based browsers like lynx. No need to bloat it up with bells and whistles, when what we are really after is the data. I still write "crap like that".