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LAX, John Wayne and Long Beach flights temporarily grounded; ports disrupted

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Departing flights from Los Angeles International Airport, Hollywood Burbank Airport, Long Beach Airport and John Wayne Airport were temporarily grounded on Friday, July 19, after the airlines asked the Federal Aviation Administration for a global ground stop on all flights, according to a FAA alert.

The request for a global grounding comes on the heels of Melbourne Airport in Australia reporting they are “experiencing a global technology issue” that is impacting their check-in procedures, ABC 7 reported.

“We are seeing some delays from United, Delta and American Airlines. Our communications center is in constant communications with the FAA,” LAX spokeswoman Dae Levine said.

Levine added that she was not sure if all the delays were related to the problems at Melbourne Airport.

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Flights already in the air were allowed to continue to their destinations, but American, United or Delta flights will not depart from their airports.

The FAA is telling air-traffic controllers to tell airborne pilots that airlines are currently experiencing communication difficulties, according to ABC 7.

At LAX, airlines were moving toward getting back to normal.

“We’re still experiencing some delays and cancellations with the various airlines, but there are others that are running on time, so it’s airline by airline,” Dae Levine, a LAX spokeswoman, told the Southern California News Group. “We are seeing some of the issues being resolved with the airline tech outage.

“It does seem like they’re starting to get back online, but there’s a residual effect for an outage like this,” she said. “It will take us a little while to make sure everything is taken care of from the backlog.”

Shipments at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach are being disrupted and delayed. KNX is reporting hundreds of trucks have been waiting for hours for cargo to be released and loaded.

“We’re aware of a technical issue with CrowdStrike that is impacting multiple carriers. American is working with CrowdStrike to resolve the issue as quickly as possible and apologize to our customers for the inconvenience,” American Airlines said in a statement obtained by ABC News.

CrowdStrike is a U.S. cybersecurity company that has admitted to being responsible for the error and is working to correct it.

“A third-party software outage is impacting computer systems worldwide, including at United,” United Airlines said in a statement on Friday morning. “While we work to restore those systems, we are holding all aircraft at their departure airports. Flights already airborne are continuing to their destinations.”

American Airlines issued a statement at 2 a.m. Friday that they were back up and running as normal.

“Earlier this morning, a technical issue with a vendor impacted multiple carriers, including American. As of 5 a.m. ET, we have been able to safely re-establish our operation. We apologize to our customers for the inconvenience,” the statement read.

Outages are spreading worldwide and are being reported at Berlin Airport in Germany, the London Stock Exchange, Google Cloud, Microsoft and Gatwick Airport in the United Kingdom.

Variety reported CrowdStrike issued a statement, stating the cybersecurity company is “actively working with customers impacted by a defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts. Mac and Linux hosts are not impacted. This is not a security incident or cyberattack. The issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed.”

Meanwhile, Microsoft said it is investigating the extent of the outage.

“We’re investigating an issue impacting users ability to access various Microsoft 365 apps and services,” Microsoft said in a statement released on social media Friday morning.

Amtrak is reporting the outage is preventing credit-card transactions for its Pacific Surfliner service. Apple Pay, Google Pay, and PayPay payments can be used to complete online reservations.

Southern California News Group reporter Nathaniel Percy contributed to this report.