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Americans skip Labor Day trips as costs rise

After missing out on summer vacations because of high fuel prices and a weakening economy, many Americans won't be going anywhere over the Labor Day weekend either.
Image: A person pulls a gas pump from his vehicle
Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is commonly seen as the last chance to get away while the weather is still hot. But that won't be happening for many this year because of gas prices and other high costs associated with traveling.Matt Rourke / AP file
/ Source: Reuters

After missing out on summer vacations because of high fuel prices and a weakening economy, many Americans won't be going anywhere over the Labor Day weekend either.

The number of people traveling 50 miles or more will drop by 0.9 percent this Labor Day weekend compared with last year, the biggest drop in at least eight years, according to travel and auto group AAA.

The expected decline comes after similar slowdowns in travel during the normally packed Memorial and Fourth of July holiday weekends this year. Americans have also experienced a downturn in overall summer travel because of rising gasoline prices and a weak dollar, which makes foreign travel more expensive for Americans.

Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is commonly seen as the last chance to get away while the weather is still hot. But for many this year, that won't be happening.

"I just can't afford it," said 26-year-old Ashley Tyrrell, who plans to skip her annual end-of-summer trek from her home in Overland Park, Kansas, to a family cabin in Wisconsin.

"I work full time. But food, gas, everything has just gone through the roof," said Tyrrell. "It's horrible. Congress is on vacation and they're probably soaking up the rays somewhere. We're soaking up high gas prices."

AAA said its annual online survey showed 34.38 million people plan to travel 50 miles or more between August 30 and September 1, down from 34.7 million last year.

That would be the biggest decline in travel during the end-of-summer holiday since at least 2000 and the first decline since 2006, the group, formerly known as the American Automobile Association, said in its survey of 8,500 people.

The number of Americans who travel by car will fall 1.1 percent to 28.64 million. Meanwhile, some 3.96 million people are planning to travel by plane, a decline of 4.5 percent from last year. Other modes of travel, such as train and bus, are expected to get a 12.5 percent boost with 1.8 million travelers, AAA said.

"More travelers concerned about the economy, gasoline prices and rising airfares are opting to travel by train, bus, motorcycle and cruise ship to their holiday weekend destinations," AAA President and CEO Robert L. Darbelnet said in a news release.

Barbecue instead
A big factor for many will be fuel prices, which are 33 percent higher than last year at around $3.70 a gallon.

Nancy Corral of Los Angeles, California, who usually drives down to a beach house in Ensenada, Mexico, with a group of her girlfriends will have a Labor Day barbecue instead.

"Nobody has enough gas money to fill up the truck, so we're not going anymore," said 24-year-old Corral, who teaches seventh-grade English. "It's too expensive, there's not enough money to rent a house like we normally do."

Brett Stoll, a 26-year-old insurance adjuster from Cincinnati, plans to attend a baseball game, watch fireworks and barbecue while keeping Labor Day travel to a minimum.

"Some of my buddies couldn't afford it this year. It just costs too much," said Stoll.

Among the reasons for an expected big decline in air travel are fares that have climbed about 15 percent higher than last year and fees for checked baggage and other services that were previously complimentary, AAA noted.

"Economic uncertainty and the heavy hit from sky-high energy prices mean that many vacation and business travelers are choosing to stay closer to home -- if they go at all," said James C. May, President and CEO of Air Transport Association of America, a trade organization representing several leading U.S. airlines.

But not everyone is deterred by rising costs.

This summer's driving season has actually seen increased travel by people living in and around New York city, spokesman Robert Sinclair of the Automobile Club of New York said earlier this week, before AAA's national survey was released.

"New Yorkers have been bucking the trend that we've seen in the rest of the country," Sinclair said. "New Yorkers want to hit the road."