United Airlines has encountered yet another chaotic moment at LaGuardia Airport, where two of its planes nearly collided while taxiing. The Boeing 737-800s came perilously close to each other on the ground, with flight 580's landing gear scraping against the tail of flight 434, which was parked on the taxiway.
Miraculously, no one on either plane was injured in the incident, thanks in part to prompt emergency response. Aboard United flight 580, 166 passengers and eight crew members disembarked without incident, as did the 162 passengers and seven crew members of flight 434, which had been bound for Houston.
The incident occurred amidst a larger backdrop of staffing shortages at LaGuardia Airport, with nearly 80% of air traffic controllers absent due to a nationwide government shutdown. In response to this critical shortage, air traffic control officials deliberately slowed down plane traffic in the New York area, exacerbating Friday's already troubled air travel patterns.
United Airlines' CEO Scott Kirby used the incident as an opportunity to call on lawmakers to put aside partisan differences and pass a clean congressional funding mechanism β known as a continuing resolution (CR) β to reopen the government.
Miraculously, no one on either plane was injured in the incident, thanks in part to prompt emergency response. Aboard United flight 580, 166 passengers and eight crew members disembarked without incident, as did the 162 passengers and seven crew members of flight 434, which had been bound for Houston.
The incident occurred amidst a larger backdrop of staffing shortages at LaGuardia Airport, with nearly 80% of air traffic controllers absent due to a nationwide government shutdown. In response to this critical shortage, air traffic control officials deliberately slowed down plane traffic in the New York area, exacerbating Friday's already troubled air travel patterns.
United Airlines' CEO Scott Kirby used the incident as an opportunity to call on lawmakers to put aside partisan differences and pass a clean congressional funding mechanism β known as a continuing resolution (CR) β to reopen the government.