Guam Airport: No flights until at least Tuesday

HAGÅTÑA (The Guam Daily Post) —  Passengers looking to leave or get to the island will have to wait until at least next Tuesday, as the Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport works to get operations back online in the wake of Typhoon Mawar.

Videos of the airport terminal flooding were circulating online throughout the storm. Clearing the area of water was the first priority for airport teams, the Joint Information Center announced Thursday.

Staff at the airport on Friday morning told The Guam Daily Post that the public was not allowed back inside due to safety reasons. Parking areas at the airport were damaged. Barriers were blown away by the storm, and no one was on duty at the parking security station.

Marly Spencer had booked tickets to fly back home to Pohnpei this week, before Mawar slammed into the island. She was trying to find out whether that was still going to happen as she stood outside the United City Ticket Office in Tiyan on Friday morning.

“My two sons left last Monday, so my flight is tomorrow. We were going to go for summer vacation. But now (I’m) stuck,” Spencer said.

Spencer wasn’t the only one. A line of customers who had been unable to reach anyone by phone had shown up at the United Airlines office to find out about their flight status. Fallen vegetation was still blocking the parking entrance, while the exit was flooded and filled with water.

A sign on the half-shuttered airline office said that it was closed until May 30, but staff could be seen sitting outside trying to help customers who had shown up and insisted on getting helped anyway. According to workers there, the office was awaiting word from Guam International Airport Authority on when the first plane could leave the island.

Runways at the airport remained closed Thursday, GIAA spokesperson Rolenda Faasuamalie said in a statement to the media. Humanitarian and essential cargo flights would be accommodated once all repairs and inspections were completed, she said.

“Our airfield fared well … However, our terminal and passenger processing technical systems have been greatly affected by flooding on all floors of the terminal,” John M. Quinata, airport executive manager, said in a statement.

“We anticipate to be able to resume operations and to be able to safely process outbound and inbound passengers in conformance to security requirements with our regulatory partners as soon as Tuesday, May 30,” he said.

Passengers are advised to contact their airlines directly for flight status and to reschedule their flights.

United Airlines

1-800-865-8331

671-645-8591

 

Jin Ai Co. Ltd.

671-642-2800

 

Jeju Air Co. Ltd.

671-649-3936

82-1599-1500

 

Korean Air

671-642-3200

Admin: 671-642-1125/6

Cargo: 671-642-5333

The Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport as seen March 26 in Tiyan. 

The Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport as seen March 26 in Tiyan. 

Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport customs and baggage area submerged in floodwaters, presenting a challenging situation.

Flooding aftermath caused by Typhoon Mawar at Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport.

 

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