Department of Transportation to Audit National Airspace System
The U.S. Department of Transportation has announced its plans to audit the National Airspace System starting this month.
The U.S. Department of Transportation has announced its plans to audit the National Airspace System starting this month.
The aircraft was arriving from Vancouver, British Columbia, with six crew members and 134 passengers on board. There were no injuries.
A passenger has filed a lawsuit against American for negligence, alleging the carrier put a 737 back into service despite it being in an “unsafe condition.”
According to its latest annual regulatory filing, Delta expects to receive 43 new aircraft in 2025, all of which are from Airbus.
British Airways is further reducing its U.S. network later this year. The carrier continues to grapple with Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engine issues.
The two met in the Oval Office, discussing air traffic control enhancements and aviation safety, two weeks after January’s deadly midair collision.
Ultra-low-cost carrier Spirit has rejected yet another merger offer from Frontier as the carrier plans to go forward with restructuring.
Last year, the carrier confirmed plans to use the 767s in its passenger fleet again. The fleet type exited revenue service in 2020.
The livery design was created by JetBlue crewmember Ray Matthew, who also coined the tagline on its side-body: “Honoring the fly-est crew in the biz.”
Runways 15/33 and 4/22 at Reagan National Airport in Washington have reopened nearly two weeks after January’s deadly midair collision.