
Southwest Airlines flight abruptly rises to avoid another plane crossing Chicago runway
Audio recording of communication between the smaller jet and the control tower recorded its pilot misstating instructions from a ground tower employee, who repeated that the pilot should 'hold short' of a runway. About 30 seconds later, the ground tower ordered the pilot 'hold your position there.'
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The tower employee is then heard saying: 'FlexJet560, your instructions were to hold short of runway 31 center.'
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Separately, a recording of communication between the Southwest crew and another ground tower employee captured its pilot reporting 'Southwest 2504 going around' and following directions to climb back to 3,000 feet.
Seconds later, the audio captures the pilot asking the tower: 'Southwest 2504, how'd that happen?'
The second plane, described as a business jet, entered the runway without authorization, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
Flexjet, the plane's owner, said the company is aware 'of the occurrence in Chicago.'
'Flexjet adheres to the highest safety standards and we are conducting a thorough investigation,' a spokesperson said in a statement. 'Any action to rectify and ensure the highest safety standards will be taken.'
Both the FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board say they are investigating.
The Southwest Flight was en route to Midway Airport from Omaha, Nebraska, according to FlightAware.
Air traffic control audio makes clear that the business jet failed to heed clear instruction not to cross the runway, said Jeff Guzzetti, a former NSTB member and former FAA investigator.
Guzzetti called it a 'very serious runway incursion,' but added: 'However, the sky is not falling because last year was the lowest recorded number of serious runway incursions in a decade.'
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There were 22 of these serious events in 2023, but just seven in 2024, he said, citing FAA data.
There can be several factors that contribute to these incidents, Guzzetti said: 'Was the crew distracted? Was the controller overworked?'
U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy said Tuesday afternoon on X that while the NTSB and the FAA are investigating, one thing is clear: 'However, it is imperative that pilots follow the instructions of air traffic controllers. If they do not, their licenses will be pulled.'
John Goglia, a former NTSB member, said the near-crash shows 'the system worked exactly as it was designed to.'
That is because the Southwest pilot was aware that the other plane wasn't going to stop in time, he said.
Investigators will likely look at factors including how well-staffed the tower was and whether instructions coming out of the tower were clear, he said.
'Those things do happen,' he said, citing possible miscommunication, including a pilot mishearing instructions.
The past few weeks have seen four major aviation disasters in North America. They include the Feb. 6 crash of a commuter plane in Alaska that killed all 10 people on board and the Jan. 26 midair collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines flight at Washington's Ronald Reagan National Airport that killed all 67 aboard the two aircraft.
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A medical transport jet with a child patient, her mother and four others aboard crashed Jan. 31 into a Philadelphia neighborhood. That crash killed seven people, including all those aboard, and injured 19 others.
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Twenty-one people were injured Feb. 17 when a Delta flight flipped and landed on its roof at Toronto's Pearson Airport.
Williams reported from Detroit. Associated Press writer Jennifer Sinco Kelleher in Honolulu contributed to this report.

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