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  • 6
    hours
    ago

    Plane makes belly landing at Newark Airport, no injuries reported

    WNBC

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A US Airways flight made a belly landing at Newark International Airport in the early morning hours on Saturday after the plane reported a problem with its landing gear, a spokesman for the airline said.

    No injuries were reported after Express Flight 4560 landed just after 1 a.m. carrying 31 passengers and three crew from Philadelphia, US Airways spokesman Davien Anderson said in a statement. The De Havilland DASH-8 100 turboprop plane was operated by Piedmont Airlines, he said.

    YouTube video shows sparks flying as a plane makes an emergency belly-landing at Newark's Liberty International Airport.

    “Passengers were evacuated, transported to a terminal and loaded on buses,” Anderson said. “All passengers departed the airport shortly after the landing after being reunited with their belongings and baggage.”

    The National Transportation Safety Board was investigating the emergency landing and assessing the extent of damage to the plane, the agency said on its Twitter feed on Saturday.

    The plane declared an emergency after its left main landing gear failed to extend, the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement. The FAA is also investigating the incident.

    “The aircraft landed successfully on Runway 4L at about 1 a.m. The airport was closed until 2:55 a.m.,” the FAA said in a statement. “Runway 4L remained closed until 9:34 a.m.”

    The aircraft sustained “minimal damage,” FAA spokesman Arlene Salec told NBC New York.

    WNBC

    100 comments

    Good job Pilot!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-airways, newark, plane, philadelphia, emergency-landing, newark-international-airport
  • 25
    Dec
    2012
    4:13am, EST

    Fire breaks out on US Airways jet at Phoenix airport

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    A US Airways jet briefly caught fire on Monday evening at its gate in the Phoenix airport. No injuries were reported.

    The fire started at 10:55 p.m. ET in the plane’s auxiliary power unit – a small motor that provides power to the aircraft when the engines are not running.

    Two pilots and three flights attendants were on board when they noticed a problem to the rear.  The Phoenix Fire Department was then called to investigate a fuel leak, Phoenix Fire Department public information officer Jonathan Jacobs told NBC News.

    Fire crews found a small blaze at the back of the jet and quickly sprayed the plane with foam.

    There were no passengers on board the Vancouver, Canada-bound jet at the time, Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport spokeswoman Kris Commerford told The Associated Press. The plane had arrived earlier in the day from California.

    The flight's 101 passengers were put on a different US Airways flight, scheduled to leave two hours later.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    46 comments

    Good thing no passengers were on board. Who knows, they might have had to pay extra for the foam used. I don't know how excited I would have been to get on the exact same type of plane after the fire on the other one. Yeah, I know, the odds of another problem would be like winning over half a billio …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, travel, arizona, fire, us-airways, plane, aviation, phoenix, us-news, featured
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    1:04pm, EDT

    Hoax that grounded US Air jet apparently sparked by Facebook photo

    The FBI is looking into motive behind a plane hoax on Thursday that forced a US Airways flight to turn around and head back to the airport in Philadelphia. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    By Pete Williams, NBC News

    Be careful of what pictures of your ex you put on Facebook.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The boyfriend of Christopher Shell's ex-girlfriend has been charged with making Thursday's hoax phone call that forced a US Airways flight to return to the Philadelphia airport. Shell is the passenger who was removed at gunpoint by federal agents, after a caller falsely claimed he was carrying liquid explosives. 

    Kenneth W. Smith, Jr, 26, of Philadelphia, has been charged with making a hoax threat. He'll appear in court at 1:30 p.m. 

    The charge carries a maximum of 10 years in prison and up to a $250,000 fine.


    Court documents say Smith admitted yesterday that he got up Thursday, walked to a pay phone, and made the call to Philadelphia Airport police. His motive, according to investigators, "was to avenge (Shell's) ex-girlfriend" after Shell posted a compromising picture of her on Facebook.

    Shell gave investigators Smith's name after agents asked him who might have made the call. Text messages on Shell's cell phone included "recent hostile messages exchanged" between Shell and his ex about her relationship with Smith, investigators said. Shell told the FBI where to find Smith. 

    US Airways Flight 1267 was en route to Dallas-Fort Worth when law enforcement officials were tipped off to a possible suspicious item on board. The jet returned to Philadelphia International shortly before 9 a.m. ET out of a "abundance of caution," an airline spokesman said Thursday.

    US Airways rebooked passengers on later flights.

    In yet another wrinkle, when Shell arrived to Dallas late Thursday, he was arrested by local police.

    He was wanted on several existing warrants in Texas for offenses having nothing to do with the hoax. When he became famous Thursday because of the plane hoax, and police in Texas discovered he was coming their way, they prepared to meet him at the airport and take him into custody on unfinished business.

    Federal officials were not certain of the nature of the existing warrants.

    The cost of the hoax will cost US Airways "upwards of tens of thousands of dollars in direct and indirect costs," the airline said.

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    154 comments

    He should be made to pay for the cost of the aircraft diverting, the cost of the law enforcement response, the cost to the passengers for being diverted and missing connections, meetings, etc., and then he should be banned from flying for life.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-airways, threat, hoax, facebook, featured
  • 6
    Sep
    2012
    9:25am, EDT

    US Airways security threat hoax was 'pretty nasty trick' played on passenger, officials say

    The security scare that resulted in a US Airways jet returning to Philadelphia International Airport on Thursday morning was the result of "a pretty nasty trick played on a passenger," police said. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire

    Updated at 8:15 p.m. ET: The security scare that resulted in a US Airways jet returning to Philadelphia International Airport on Thursday morning was the result of "a pretty nasty trick played on a passenger," authorities said.

    But it appears police had the last laugh.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The man taken off the jet and questioned was the victim of a hoax, apparently performed because Thursday was his birthday, officials said. It's still not clear whether a social media posting was involved. But a telephone call was placed to Philadelphia police, claiming that he was trying to "smuggle" something to Texas.


    The US Airways flight en route to Dallas-Fort Worth returned to Philadelphia International after law enforcement officials learned there could be a suspicious item on board. The airline learned of the potential threat from the FBI, US Airways spokesperson Davien Anderson told NBC News. 

    Flight 1267 took off in Philadelphia and returned shortly before 9 a.m. ET out of an "abundance of caution," Anderson said.

    The cost of the hoax will cost US Airways "upwards of tens of thousands of dollars in direct and indirect costs," the airline said. Sixty-nine passengers were on the Airbus A319, and were being rebooked on other flights.

    When the man at the center of the hoax got to Dallas late Thursday, he was arrested by local police.

    He was wanted on several existing warrants in Texas for offenses having nothing to do with the hoax. When he became famous Thursday because of the plane hoax, and police in Texas discovered he was coming their way, they prepared to meet him at the airport and take him into custody on unfinished business.

    Federal officials were not certain of the nature of the existing warrants. 

    A US Airways flight bound for Dallas-Fort Worth returned to Philadelphia International Airport following a security alert. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    NBC News' justice correspondent Pete Williams contributed to this report. 

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    189 comments

    Did you actually read the article? It says that there was an anonymous call to the Philly police, that someone was taken off in handcuffs and that bomb sniffing dogs and the FBI are on the plane. Given that this occurred about an hour ago, I think that is a lot of detail so far.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-airways, philadelphia, featured, flight-security
  • 3
    Aug
    2012
    5:00pm, EDT

    US Airways flight at Reagan National airport aborted after fire scare

    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    Passengers were removed from a plane at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Washington, D.C., on Friday after the pilot of the US Airways regional flight aborted takeoff.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The flight, operated by Air Wisconsin, was departing for Islip, N.Y., when an engine heat warning indicator came on and the pilot called for assistance. Andrew Christie, a spokesman for US Airways, told NBC News that takeoff for Flight 3652 was aborted "out of an abundance of caution."


    Fire crews inspected the plane, and the 49 passengers and three crew members were removed and bused back to the terminal.

    The inspection resulted in the brief closure of runways, but the airport resumed normal operations at 3:15 p.m. ET, said Rob Yingling, a spokesman for Reagan National. 

    There were no injuries and the passengers are being rebooked on a later flight, Christie said.

    The incident comes a few days after three US Airways regional jets were involved in a close call at the same airport.

    Transportation officials on Thursday acknowledged a “loss of separation” involving the three planes, but insisted the aircraft were never on a collision course.

    “At no point were these planes on a head-to-head collision point,” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood told reporters on Thursday.

    Michael Huerta, head of the Federal Aviation Administration, said the incident occurred because of a miscommunication between a manager at Potomac Tracon — the region's radar control facility — and traffic management coordinators at Reagan National.

    FAA said the landing plane, which departed from Portland, Maine, came within 800 vertical feet and about nine-tenths of a lateral mile of one departing plane and 800 vertical feet and 2.4 lateral miles of the second plane. The other planes had been departing for Kansas City and Columbus, Ohio. The planes all reached their destinations safely.

    The FAA has launched an investigation into an incident over Washington D.C.'s Reagan airport where three passenger jets dangerously close to each other. NBC's Chris Clackum reports.

    NBCWashington contributed to this report.

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    3 comments

    the headline reads - "US Airways flight at Reagan National airport aborted after fire scare" oh boy it must have been an ugly scene,... so i start reading the story only to find out that - "an engine heat warning indicator came on and the pilot called for assistance" wow... "a warning indicator came …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-airways, featured, reagan-national
  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    6:05am, EDT

    DOT, FAA: 3 jets in close call never at risk of colliding

    U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood spoke to NBC Nightly News about a close call at Washington Reagan National Airport. Two US Airways commuter planes were cleared to take off in the wrong direction, and headed toward a third plane that was preparing to land at the airport. The planes avoided collision but passed too close for federal minimum standards. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 4:25 p.m. ET -- Transportation officials on Thursday acknowledged a “loss of separation” involving three US Airways regional jets at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on Tuesday, but insisted the aircraft were never on a collision course.

    “At no point were these planes on a head-to-head collision point,” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood told reporters on Thursday.

    Michael Huerta, head of the Federal Aviation Administration, said the incident occurred because of a miscommunication between a manager at Potomac Tracon — the region's radar control facility — and traffic management coordinators at Reagan National.


    LaHood and Huerta credited a tower controller at Reagan National who recognized a problem and handled the situation.

    Potomac Tracon altered traffic flow at Reagan National because of bad weather, FAA said in a statement, which "led to a loss of the required separation between two regional jets" departing from the same runway and a third regional jet that was bound for Reagan National. The agency is investigating "and will take appropriate action to address the miscommunication."

    All of the planes were equipped with collision avoidance systems, but none was activated by the incident, Huerta said. 

    When asked by a reporter, LaHood refused to discuss what may have happened if the planes had not been diverted by the air traffic controller.

    As TODAY's Natalie Morales reports, federal officials are investigating why air traffic controllers at Washington National Airport instructed two planes to take off in the path of a landing jet.

    Federal guidelines require that commercial jets remain separated by at least 1,000 vertical feet and 3.5 lateral miles.

    The agency said the landing plane, which departed from Portland, Maine, came within 800 vertical feet and about nine-tenths of a lateral mile of one departing plane and 800 vertical feet and 2.4 lateral miles of the second plane. The other planes had been departing for Kansas City and Columbus, Ohio. The planes all reached their destinations safely.

    On Wednesday, the Washington Post reported the three US Airways jets carrying 192 passengers and crew members came within seconds of a midair collision around 2 p.m. ET on Tuesday, citing federal officials with direct knowledge of the incident.

    The Post report cited a discussion between a pilot and an air traffic controller:

    “Are you with me?” the tower controller asked the inbound pilot, checking to see whether he was tuned to her radio frequency. When the pilot acknowledged her, she ordered him to make an abrupt turn to the south to avoid the other two planes.

    “We were cleared [for landing] at the river there,” the pilot said after breaking off the approach northwest of the airport. “What happened?”

    After a pause, the controller said, “Stand by, we’re trying to figure this out.”

    As she directed him to make a loop around the airport for a second landing attempt the pilot cautioned: “We really don’t have enough fuel here for this. We have to get on the ground pretty quick.”

    In fiscal year 2010, the FAA recorded 1,887 operational errors, which the agency defines as a "situation in which an air traffic controller fails to maintain a safe distance between two or more aircraft, in the air or on the ground, or a safe distance from terrain, obstructions and certain airspace not designated for routine air travel." That was an increase from fiscal year 2009, in which the FAA recorded 1,234 such errors.

    US Airways has more than 230 daily departures from the airport to over 70 cities. U.S. lawmakers frequently fly in and out of the airport, and some members of Congress took notice of the close call. 

    "Such near misses and any operational errors are calls to action," said Rep. John L. Mica, R-Fla., chairman of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. 

    The airport had another high-profile safety incident in March 2011 when two airliners landed without assistance from the tower. Pilots were unable to raise the lone supervisor on duty at midnight. The supervisor later acknowledged he had fallen asleep. A second controller has since been added to the midnight shift at Reagan National. 

    In 2010, U.S. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin was aboard a United flight involved in a near-collision at Regan National. He said more should be done to improve the nation's air traffic control policy and safety. 

    "Only better training and disciplinary action for those who violate the rules will solve the problem," Sensenbrenner said in an e-mail. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    267 comments

    Ironic to happen at an airport named for the guy who wiped out the air traffic controllers.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: washington, dc, us-airways, faa, featured, ronald-reagan-washington-national-airport
  • 23
    Nov
    2011
    3:55pm, EST

    Flier, displaced by obese seatmate, forced to stand

    By Joe Myxter, NBC News

    A passenger on a US Airways flight said he was forced to stand for seven hours after he was squeezed out of his seat by an obese man sitting next to him.

    “I didn’t fly from Alaska to Philadelphia on Flight 901,” Arthur Berkowitz told Christopher Elliott, a consumer advocate who operates elliott.org. “I stood.”

    “His size required both armrests to be raised up and allowed for his body to cover half of my seat,” Berkowitz said. “It did not allow me to use my seatbelt during takeoff and landing as well as required me to stand in the aisle and galley area for most of the seven-hour-plus flight.”

    The incident occurred on July 29 and was first reported by Elliott on Tuesday.

    Berkowitz said he alerted flight attendants to the problem, but they were unable to accommodate him, according to his account on elliott.org. “They were sympathetic, but they could not do anything. No other seats existed on plane. They would not permit me to sit in their jump seats, and fully acknowledged the mistake by their gate agent, in allowing this individual on plane without requiring him to purchase and occupy two seats,” he said.

    Liz Landau, a spokesperson for US Airways, confirmed that Berkowitz was inconvenienced by a passenger of size and told msnbc.com “it was his choice to stand.”

    “His seatmate had the same right to his seat as Mr. Berkowitz did to his. So here’s where the diplomacy and cooperation of all passengers comes into play,” the airline said in a statement.

    Berkowitz was unhappy with the $200 voucher the airline offered him for his experience, at which point he contacted Elliott.

    "We have attempted to address this customer’s service concerns,” the airline statement said, “but offering increasing amounts of compensation based on a threat of a safety violation isn’t really fair — especially when the passenger himself said he didn’t follow crew members’ instructions and fasten his seatbelt.

    “The way to ensure you have space available next to you — whether you are a person of size, or you would simply like to ensure you have more personal space to relax on a long flight — is to purchase that additional seat, or First Class, in advance.”

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    Joe Myxter has been running msnbc.com's Travel section since 2006. Follow him on Twitter.

    1443 comments

    Pay up US Airways. The man could not sit in his seat b/c it was occupied by half of the obese person. He had no way to put on a seatbelt. When this was discovered the pilot should have returned to the gate and deplaned the obese person for not buying a necessary second seat for their size. .

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-airways, featured, seatmates-of-size, joe-myxter

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