Latest news with #Maszk


CBS News
26-02-2025
- CBS News
Some on Southwest flight said they had no idea about aborted landing at Midway until hours later
Passengers on a Southwest Airlines flight trying to land at Midway International Airport didn't even find out about a close call with a private business jet on the runway until hours later. Some people onboard said they didn't know what happened until they got to their destinations. Video shows Southwest flight 2504 from Omaha coming in for a landing at the airport, then quickly aborting to avoid a potential collision with the business jet that was taxiing across the runway. The Southwest flight was just inches from the ground when the pilots throttled up and climbed skyward to avoid the business jet — which preliminary data show was a FlexJet Bombardier Challenger bound for Knoxville, Tennessee. Seconds later, the Southwest plane flew over the business jet at an approximate altitude of 250 feet, according to preliminary flight data. An audio recording from air traffic control shows that the private plane had been cleared to cross one runway, but hold at another. The pilot of the private jet repeated the instructions to the tower incorrectly, and was corrected by the tower. The pilot then repeated the instructions correctly. About 30 seconds later, the Southwest pilot can be heard saying they are "going around." The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board are investigating after the business jet entered the runway without authorization. Emily Novak and Caley Maszk were on the plane, Southwest Flight 2504. They were flying from Omaha for a layover at Midway before continuing to Dallas. They took a photo of the city outside their window minutes before the Delta plane nearly hit the private jet on the runway. "Honestly, it was such a calm situation," said Novak. Novak and Maszk said there were about 100 people on the Southwest plane, and most did not know the severity of what had happened. "Right as we were about to hit the ground, we just started taking off again," Novak said. "We didn't know the situation at all, actually, until we got to Dallas." Pilot and former air traffic controller Rob Mark said what the pilot did was a textbook "perfect go-around." Southwest added its crew performed a "precautionary go-around to avoid the other aircraft." Mark said the private jet pilot likely did not look both ways before crossing the runway. "They would have absolutely seen the Southwest jet about to land on the runway, because the visibility is incredible today," Mark said. As for Novak and Maszk, they said they were already nervous flying after serious accidents have made headlines in the U.S. and Canada lately. "I think if were to know what happened, and then had to go fly to Dallas, I think I would have been very anxious," Maszk said. These incidents have included a deadly airplane and Black Hawk helicopter collision over Washington, D.C., a Delta Air Lines flight crash-landing upside-down in Toronto, and just this week, another Delta flight making an emergency landing in Atlanta due to "possible smoke" in the cabin." After the near-miss at Midway Tuesday, Novak and Maszk said they are grateful — and they had a message for the pilot and crew. "Thank you," Nowak said. "We are so lucky that we had the pilot and crew that we did — so lucky." Transportation experts said flying is still very safe, and these separate individual incidents do not follow any pattern. Flexjet, the company that was in charge of the private jet, said it is investigating and will do what is needed to rectify the situation.
Yahoo
26-02-2025
- Yahoo
Southwest plane lands safely in Chicago after close call with jet that went on runway without authorization
A Southwest Airlines plane landed safely at Chicago Midway International Airport after a close call with a business jet that "entered the runway without authorization," according to the Federal Aviation Administration. Southwest Flight 2504, which was arriving from Omaha, Nebraska, landed "without incident" Tuesday morning after the crew "performed a precautionary go-around to avoid a possible conflict with another aircraft that entered the runway," Southwest said in a statement. The FAA said a business jet went onto the runway without authorization. Air traffic controllers could be heard telling the business jet to hold short and not cross the runway, but the jet did not follow instructions. The air traffic controller was heard telling the Flexjet pilot, "Your instructions were to hold short of runway 31 center." Approximately 2,050 feet separated the planes before Southwest initiated its go-around, according to data from FlightRadar24. "Nothing is more important to Southwest than the Safety of our Customers and Employees," Southwest said. MORE: Haze or smoke on Delta plane forces passengers to evacuate via slides at Atlanta airport A spokesperson for private jet company Flexjet said it "adheres to the highest safety standards" and is "conducting a thorough investigation." "Any action to rectify and ensure the highest safety standards will be taken," the spokesperson said. The National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA are investigating. MORE: How did every passenger walk out of a fiery Delta plane crash in Toronto? Two friends from Omaha who were on the plane told ABC Chicago station WLS that they didn't realize the near-miss until they saw a video of the incident upon landing at their final destination in Dallas. "I don't think anybody knew," passenger Caley Maszk told the station. "It was just so calm and like a normal day." After the go-around, Maszk told WLS that the pilot informed the passengers that there was another plane on the tarmac "and that we just had to do a little loop around for about 10 minutes." Her friend and fellow passenger, Emily Novak, told WLS that the pilot "kept the situation very calm." "Things happen, and that's what the pilots are trained for," she told the station. "They're trained to react in bad situations, and they did just that in a very good way." When she and Novak saw the video of the incident, Maszk said they were "shocked." "We were also very thankful, because it looked like it was very close," Maszk told the station. "If I could hug the pilot right now, I probably would." Southwest plane lands safely in Chicago after close call with jet that went on runway without authorization originally appeared on