Vancouver airport fully operational Saturday after hundreds of cancellations due to Friday's storm
More than 300 flights were cancelled Friday as snow and freezing rain swept through the region
Air traffic resumed at Vancouver International Airport (YVR) on Christmas Eve, a day after more than 300 flights were cancelled due to a snowstorm.
The airport came to a virtual standstill on Friday as WestJet, Air Canada and other operators called off hundreds of flights due to the second snowstorm in a week, which left some travellers stranded for days because of earlier flight cancellations.
Despite some delays, operations resumed on Saturday, airport officials said.
"Our airport is fully operational," Tamara Vrooman, president and CEO of the Vancouver Airport Authority said at a 10 a.m. PT news conference. "Some cancellations are coming through because of weather events in other parts of the country and other parts of the continent."
About 87 per cent of scheduled flights were expected to run, YVR said at 11:30 a.m. PT. There had been 70 cancellations on Saturday compared with 323 on Friday.
The airport provided access to more than 400 hotel rooms and restaurant gift cards to passengers who faced overnight delays, YVR said in a release on Friday.
"We have had 145 bookings for our hotel services so far," Vrooman said on Saturday morning, noting about 65,000 people are expected to travel through the airport today.
That's typical for a busy Christmas Eve weekend, she said, adding that security screening was at its usual capacity.
"The runway is bare and wet and ready for Santa, as we head into Christmas Day tomorrow," she said.
Some of the chaos seen at Vancouver airport on Friday was caused by pre-emptive cancellations by WestJet, which suspended all flights into from late Thursday until Friday evening.
In a statement, the Calgary-based airline promised to expand their cancellation and refund policy due to the wave of suspensions.
"We sincerely apologize to guests who have been impacted by cancellations and delays resulting from severe winter weather across Western Canada," they said on Friday afternoon.
With files from Yasmin Gandham and Bethany Lindsay