AIRLINES have cancelled around 1600 flights, and another 1200 experienced delays, in the aftermath of a massive weekend blizzard that slammed into the eastern US.
Even as the airlines resumed operations, the remnants of the storm posed problems.
For instance, Delta said snow continued to hamper operations at LaGuardia and Newark airports.
On Monday, airports in the New York City area and Washington DC metro areas suffered the highest number of cancellations.
For some travellers in those locations, getting home continued to be an adventure.
Newark Liberty International listed 260 cancelled flights and 48 delays as of Monday afternoon, the most of any US airport, according to the flight tracking service FlightAware.
Meanwhile, LaGuardia listed 177 cancelled flights and 30 delays with John F. Kennedy airport listing 46 cancellations and 40 delays.
In Washington DC, Washington Dulles International listed 128 cancellations and five delays.
Reagan National had 124 cancellations. Baltimore/Washington International listed 74 cancellations.
John Escobar, 27, finished a three-month work contract surgical technician at New York Presbyterian/Lawrence Hospital in Brooklyn on Friday and has been trying to get home to Fort Lauderdale ever since.
Escobar had flights cancelled on Saturday and Sunday. He booked a flight on Monday on American Airlines, but there were no direct flights for under $US1000 ($A1432), "so I'm flying to Boston, then Charlotte, then home".
Among the major airlines, United Airlines, which is owned by United Continental Holdings, suffered the brunt of cancellations as it has key hubs at both Newark Liberty and Washington Dulles.
There are already more than 200 flight cancellations for Tuesday, with the bulk from United Airlines' regional carrier United Express at Washington Dulles.
Overall, airlines cancelled about 13,000 flights for the five-day period from Friday through Tuesday.
The storm dropped snow from the Gulf Coast to New England, with near-record snowfalls tallied from Washington DC to New York City.
At least 31 people have died as a result of the snowstorm. The deaths occurred in car accidents, from carbon monoxide poisoning, and from heart attacks while shovelling snow.
AAP