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More than 8,000 flights in the US are affected by a storm that paralyzes travel.

U.S. Airlines are planning to add flights on Tuesday as they deal with thousands of'scrubbed' flights the day after a powerful Northeast winter storm?forced over 8,000 cancellations.

The storm

Snowfall blanketed the Northeast of the United States, closing roads and canceling school.

United Airlines, which was affected by the cancellations on Monday, said that they were planning to increase their operations on Tuesday. However, they warned that conditions "remain challenging".

Cirium data as of late afternoon shows that 7% of U.S. flight cancellations are expected on Tuesday. This is down from?over 19% on Monday. Cirium data shows that on a typical day, 1% of domestic flights in the U.S. are cancelled.

Southwest Airlines announced that its plan is "on track to begin?ramping-up operations tomorrow, provided conditions allow us to do so safely."

The Dallas-based low cost carrier cancelled?about 7 percent of flights Monday. This was less than rivals because of the carrier's limited Northeast exposure.

American Airlines announced that it was able to resume its operations at Washington Reagan National Airport and Philadelphia.

Delta and American have both stated that they plan to resume operations in Boston and at New York's LaGuardia, JFK and LaGuardia airports late Tuesday morning. Delta will also resume Newark flights Tuesday. JetBlue, which cancelled 80% of its flights on Monday due to the storm, was particularly hard-hit, according to FlightAware data. The airline has said that it has cancelled 1,600 total flights as of Wednesday.

Amtrak, the U.S. passenger rail company, canceled dozens of trains between New York City and Boston as well as on other routes in the Northeast. Due to heavy snowfall, several states have ordered that motorists refrain from non-essential travel.

American, Delta, and?United?all canceled around 20% of flights on Monday. The blizzard dumped more than 2 1/2 feet (76.2 cm) of snow across parts of the U.S. Northeast. Reporting by David Shepardson, Allison Lampert and Howard Goller; Editing by David Gregorio and Howard Goller

(source: Reuters)