Quote:
Nobody "comes in hot". They fly the calculated approach reference speed for their weight and field and weather conditions.
fullback44 said:
Not blaming anyone in specific, but I certainly would want to know if the Air traffic controller was qualified for that job, sure seems there are plenty of people in that field that maybe shouldn't be per general media reports. Who instructs a huge fire truck to go across a live runway? anyway, Im sure the entire story will come out and we will all know these answers so just going to have to sit back and wait see what happened and why
Airline pilot here:
— Damian Lopez (@deelo190) March 23, 2026
I’ve made a few posts, for posterity it seems I should combine them so here goes:
I guess I should lead with the fact that I know LGA really, really well -
And having 1 controller working both ground and tower; late… on a Sunday is straight up normal.…
Rapier108 said:JFABNRGR said:lunchbox said:JFABNRGR said:Rapier108 said:
Looks legit.
The flight attendant sitting behind the cockpit was found on the tarmac, still strapped to her seat.
Wow that would likely be the lead FA, leaving a junior FA in charge of the aircraft and emergency evacuation.
From the reports I read, emergency crews had to open the doors from the outside...the junior FA may not have been able to lead anything after the crash
Where have all the men gone!
Will be interesting to see the vids come out on who took charge if anyone or was it just pure chaos on board.
There were a lot of injuries. Very possible between that and shock, no one was able to open the doors before emergency services arrived.
Aggie Jurist said:Quote:
Nobody "comes in hot". They fly the calculated approach reference speed for their weight and field and weather conditions.
Southwest pilots had that reputation for many years - higher approach speeds and higher taxi speeds.
one safe place said:infinity ag said:
I hope they don't get the bright idea of "let's replace all ATCs with AI!" and fire everyone even before the tech has been proven to work 100% (not 99%). But knowing how things work, I won't be surprised if they do it to grab headlines, cut costs and make bonus targets.
Self-flying aircraft could be the next step from self-driving cars.
Quote:
In the audio, the FT driver asked for and was given permission to CROSS Runway 4. But from the video, he turned ONTO runway 4 and was proceeding down it. He also stated he was crossing the runway about 3-4 seconds before he entered it
Aggie Jurist said:Quote:
In the audio, the FT driver asked for and was given permission to CROSS Runway 4. But from the video, he turned ONTO runway 4 and was proceeding down it. He also stated he was crossing the runway about 3-4 seconds before he entered it
He may have been turning away at the last instant, but otherwise, he was not cleared down RWY 4. He was cleared to cross at Delta. That's a very specific clearance and they are trained as to what that clearance means.
lunchbox said:Aggie Jurist said:Quote:
In the audio, the FT driver asked for and was given permission to CROSS Runway 4. But from the video, he turned ONTO runway 4 and was proceeding down it. He also stated he was crossing the runway about 3-4 seconds before he entered it
He may have been turning away at the last instant, but otherwise, he was not cleared down RWY 4. He was cleared to cross at Delta. That's a very specific clearance and they are trained as to what that clearance means.
I do agree it appears he was turning down runway 4 and maybe it was because he saw the plane at the last second.
However, the D crossing is not perpendicular. It is slanted in the direction he was turning. It could be that the angle of the video makes it look like he was turning while he was just going at the angle of D.
NTSB will hold a media briefing today at 6:00 p.m. ET on the March 22 collision involving Air Canada Express Flight 8646 (Jazz Aviation, CRJ-900) and a firefighting vehicle on Runway 4 at LaGuardia Airport. 📍 LaGuardia Airport Terminal B Atrium. Livestream link available here:…
— NTSB Newsroom (@NTSB_Newsroom) March 23, 2026
W said:
how fast was the fire truck going?
GAC06 said:aggiehawg said:
Wonder what the cockpit voice recorder will reveal as to when the pilots perceived the danger until impact. Doubt it was much more than a few seconds given poor visibility.
Further, no idea about that particular carrier but The Hubs has always sad that Southwest pilots tended to come in hot and not slow down that much even when taxiing given their strict time schedules.
The Hubs said he would usually drive at about 15 MPH while on the AOA unless instructed there was a higher level emergency to which they were responding. Either way, they always had full lights going.
Nobody "comes in hot". They fly the calculated approach reference speed for their weight and field and weather conditions.
Esteban du Plantier said:GAC06 said:aggiehawg said:
Wonder what the cockpit voice recorder will reveal as to when the pilots perceived the danger until impact. Doubt it was much more than a few seconds given poor visibility.
Further, no idea about that particular carrier but The Hubs has always sad that Southwest pilots tended to come in hot and not slow down that much even when taxiing given their strict time schedules.
The Hubs said he would usually drive at about 15 MPH while on the AOA unless instructed there was a higher level emergency to which they were responding. Either way, they always had full lights going.
Nobody "comes in hot". They fly the calculated approach reference speed for their weight and field and weather conditions.
I think she's talking about a high-speed taxi. Not the landing itself.
fullback44 said:
Not blaming anyone in specific, but I certainly would want to know if the Air traffic controller was qualified for that job, sure seems there are plenty of people in that field that maybe shouldn't be per general media reports. Who instructs a huge fire truck to go across a live runway? anyway, Im sure the entire story will come out and we will all know these answers so just going to have to sit back and wait see what happened and why
fullback44 said:
Not blaming anyone in specific, but I certainly would want to know if the Air traffic controller was qualified for that job, sure seems there are plenty of people in that field that maybe shouldn't be per general media reports. Who instructs a huge fire truck to go across a live runway? anyway, Im sure the entire story will come out and we will all know these answers so just going to have to sit back and wait see what happened and why
sts7049 said:
very very difficult to rely on visual cues at night. the crash at reagan demonstrated that.
you need to first try and eliminate the human elements. juan browne mentioned ADS-B tech is available for ground vehicles which can be used to look for conflicts. that would be a good start.

The actions of the United crew and passengers seem very important to this accident. They had odors in the cabin and two aborted takeoffs? I can believe the passengers were being difficult to handle at that point.jrdaustin said:
One other thing I noted, and you guys can confirm. From what I can tell, the United flight that was having the odor issues was on the other runway at the complete opposite end of the airfield, correct? They were having the tower try to get them a gate, and then when that was not available, the ATC's were directing the United flight to a taxiway to stop and wait for assistance. BUT.... The plane turned left when he was asked to turn right. Innocent mistake, but all of that going on had the controllers' attention - on the other side of the airport.
As someone stated earlier, this appears the FTCs went from very busy activity to "activity saturation" due to the emergent issue at the other end of the field. The scenario, though different, reminds me of the recent incident at Reagan where the military had helicopters flying through airport operations airspace. 10 pounds of crap in a 5 pound bag, as it were.
Unfortunate all the way around.
G Martin 87 said:The actions of the United crew and passengers seem very important to this accident. They had odors in the cabin and two aborted takeoffs? I can believe the passengers were being difficult to handle at that point.jrdaustin said:
One other thing I noted, and you guys can confirm. From what I can tell, the United flight that was having the odor issues was on the other runway at the complete opposite end of the airfield, correct? They were having the tower try to get them a gate, and then when that was not available, the ATC's were directing the United flight to a taxiway to stop and wait for assistance. BUT.... The plane turned left when he was asked to turn right. Innocent mistake, but all of that going on had the controllers' attention - on the other side of the airport.
As someone stated earlier, this appears the FTCs went from very busy activity to "activity saturation" due to the emergent issue at the other end of the field. The scenario, though different, reminds me of the recent incident at Reagan where the military had helicopters flying through airport operations airspace. 10 pounds of crap in a 5 pound bag, as it were.
Unfortunate all the way around.
Quote:
An Air Canada flight attendant miraculously survived being thrown more than 300 feet from the plane when it crashed into a fire truck at LaGuardia Airport on Sunday night because of her "robust" jump seat, according to a safety expert.
Solange Tremblay was seated in her jump seat which is specifically designed to withstand crashes when Flight 8646 T-boned a Port Authority fire truck en route to an emergency around 11:40 p.m.
The impact of the crash sent Tremblay flying 300 feet from the aircraft, her daughter said but she suffered only a fractured leg.
sts7049 said:
per NTSB the controller gave the truck clearance less than 30 seconds prior to the crash and the truck confirmed about 17 seconds prior.