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Virgin Atlantic Airways passengers get help with baggage in Newark, N.J., after being kept on a hot plane without food or water for more than four hours in Connecticut. The U.S. has a three-hour limit on tarmac stranding for domestic flights.
Virgin Atlantic Airways passengers get help with baggage in Newark, N.J., after being kept on a hot plane without food or water for more than four hours in Connecticut. The U.S. has a three-hour limit on tarmac stranding for domestic flights.
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NEWARK, N.J. — A hot, dark and miserable four-hour stretch spent by hundreds of travelers parked in a diverted transatlantic plane renewed calls Wednesday to add international travel to a months-old federal rule limiting how long airlines can keep passengers trapped on the tarmac.

All of about 300 passengers marooned late Tuesday and early Wednesday at Bradley International Airport outside Hartford, Conn., finally reached their original destination, New Jersey’s Newark Liberty International Airport, by midafternoon, piling off buses and describing chaos and desperation in the cabin as temperatures and tempers rose.

Some passengers fell ill from the heat as the London- to-Newark Virgin Atlantic flight lingered on the tarmac, and at least one had to be administered oxygen, said David Cooper of London.

A federal three-hour limit on tarmac strandings went into effect in April, eight months after 47 passengers on a Continental Express flight were stranded overnight on a runway in Rochester, Minn. The Associated Press

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