LaGuardia Airport gingerly resumed limited flights after an Air Canada plane, landing from Montreal, collided late Sunday with a Port Authority rescue truck on Runway 4, killing both pilots and injuring dozens. Officials blame a last-second mix-up i…
LaGuardia Airport replays its role as New York's least beloved gateway after Air Canada Flight 8646 clipped a Port Authority rescue truck late Sunday, killing two pilots, injuring dozens, and strewing debris across its runways. While federal sleuths wade through the wreckage—delayed, fittingly, by epic TSA queues—travelers can expect days of chaos, though thankfully not 34 years’ worth, since the last fatal crash here.
An Air Canada jet arriving from Montreal collided with a fire truck at New York’s LaGuardia Airport late Sunday, killing both pilots and injuring several of the 70-plus people aboard—though a seatbelted flight attendant survived an unscheduled ejection. Amid a shortage of air traffic controllers, officials are now picking through cockpit debris (and recriminations), with the runway closed for days and the National Transportation Safety Board scripting the next chapter.
A collision at New York’s LaGuardia Airport between an Air Canada jet and a fire truck killed both pilots and injured dozens, but federal investigators, slowed by the government shutdown, took longer than usual to reach the scene. Authorities salvaged the cockpit voice recorder, offering some hope that the cause will emerge—assuming bureaucracy doesn’t outpace the black box in spilling secrets.
Travelers at New York’s LaGuardia Airport faced an unscheduled layover after a plane clipped a fire truck on the tarmac, prompting at least 500 cancelled flights—roughly 40% of departures. The Federal Aviation Administration and Port Authority are investigating what grounded both the emergency vehicle and so many passengers. No serious injuries were reported, though the city’s patience is presumably still in recovery.
Two pilots died when their Air Canada regional plane struck a Port Authority emergency vehicle on LaGuardia Airport’s runway late Sunday, grounding New York flights amid investigations and regretful statements from unions. The airport, a familiar stage for logistical headaches, shut down operations for hours, and while questions pile up about how such mishaps happen in crowded hubs, we can only hope the next reroute comes with less drama and more explanation.
A regional jet collided with a fire truck on the runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport, killing two pilots and injuring dozens; air travel’s already bruised reputation takes another knock. Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board are combing through black box data and protocols, now under the weary gaze of frequent fliers—though the odds of your next flight meeting a fire truck remain, statistically, vanishingly slim.
A collision between an Air Canada Express jet and a fire truck at New York’s LaGuardia Airport killed both pilots and injured dozens on Sunday night, authorities report, with the plane striking the emergency vehicle during takeoff after a delayed “Stop!” command from air traffic control. As investigations gather pace, LaGuardia’s reputation for hair-raising drama seems, for now, grimly intact.
We learned Air Canada co-pilot Mackenzie Gunther, just 2023-graduated from Seneca Polytechnic, was killed alongside captain Antoine Forest when their Jazz Aviation jet slammed into a fire truck on a LaGuardia runway—both vehicles cleared to cross at the same time, somehow. Miraculously, most of the 70 aboard survived with minor injuries; the spirited plane outpaced air traffic control, but not official confusion.
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