Alaska Media Center
Mount Redoubt volcano information
atiamedia@gci.net
Mount Redoubt eruption no cause for alarm
ANCHORAGE – While news outlets worldwide feature stories on the explosion of Alaska’s Mount Redoubt volcano, travelers are urged to get current, local information before cancelling travel plans.
The volcano, which is located approximately 103 miles southwest of Anchorage, began erupting on Sunday, March 22, and has been intermittently active since. So far, though, the ash cloud has not significantly impacted Anchorage airspace, and ash fall has been limited to a few small, remote communities.
Volcanologists in Alaska and elsewhere have noted the volcano could remain active for a period of weeks or months, but travelers with trips planned for the summer should monitor the situation before cancelling vacation plans. Visitors are asked to check with local convention and visitors bureaus and tourism businesses to find out what the situation is like in the specific areas to which they are traveling. Most areas of the state remain unaffected by the volcano’s eruption.
“If I wasn’t paying attention to news broadcasts or the web, I wouldn’t even know it was happening,” said Ron Peck, president and COO of the Alaska Travel Industry Association. “Right now in Anchorage we’re seeing basically no impact from the eruption, and that could continue to be the case indefinitely. It would be a shame if people cancelled their plans for no real reason.”
Weather and other meteorological forces dictate ash-fall patterns, and circumstances can change often and quickly. Updates are posted regularly at several sites, including the Alaska Volcano Observatory (www.avo.alaska.edu), the National Weather Service (http://pafc.arh.noaa.gov/volcano.php) and Anchorage Convention & Visitors Bureau (www.anchorage.net/volcano).
ATIA is a non-profit, membership-based organization made up of all facets of Alaska’s visitor industry and representing over 1,100 large and small travel-related businesses. The association serves as the voice of Alaska’s tourism industry and maintains the TravelAlaska.com Web site for visitors interested in the state.
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Links:
Alaska Volcano Observatory (Redoubt page):
http://www.avo.alaska.edu/activity/Redoubt.php
National Weather Service (volcano)
http://pafc.arh.noaa.gov/volcano.php
Anchorage International Airport (flight status):
http://aia-mufids.dot.state.ak.us/
Passports for U.S. and Canadian Citizens
ATIA
U.S. and Canadian citizens will need a passport or other WHTI compliant document to enter and re-enter the United States by land or sea from the United States, Mexico, Canada, the Caribbean and Bermuda.
WHTI has been in effect for air travel since January of 2007. Some of the WHTI approved documents are a passport, a passport card (PassCard), a NEXUS, SENTRI or FAST trusted traveler program card, a state issued enhanced driver’s license, such as Washington state’s EDL.
Children under the age of 16 only need a birth certificate. For a full list of WHTI compliant documents and other exceptions, please visit:
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
www.GetYouHome.gov
www.cbp.gov
Department of Homeland Security
www.dhs.gov
The Department of State
www.travel.state.gov