The plane’s cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder have now been sent to a lab for further analysis, the Transportation Safety Board of Canada, which is leading the investigation into the incident, said on Feb. 18.
Delta flight 4819, operated by subsidiary Endeavor Air, was arriving from Minneapolis when it crashed while landing at Pearson Airport just after 2 p.m. EST.
Who Was on Board and Who Was Injured?
All 76 passengers and four crew members were able to escape after the plane overturned, according to Greater Toronto Airports Authority (GTAA) CEO Deborah Flint. Twenty-two of the people onboard the flight were Canadian.Flint told reporters during a Feb. 18 afternoon press conference that the two patients who remain in hospital have non-life threatening injuries, but she refrained from giving further details.
“It’s really important to recognize how grateful we are that there was no loss of life or life-threatening injuries in yesterday’s accident,” she said.
Delta also has not released details on the condition of the patients.
Was Weather a Factor?
Pearson Airport recorded an accumulation of 50 centimetres of snow over the Family Day long weekend after two consecutive winter storms hit Toronto.“From last Thursday to Sunday, Pearson saw extreme conditions,” Flint said, adding that the amount of snow received was a rare occurrence.
“In fact, it is more snow within that time window than we received in all of last winter.”
The weather not only caused flight delays over the course of the weekend but left airport employees with a massive clean-up.
GTAA fire chief Todd Aitken told reporters at a Feb. 17 media briefing that the runway conditions were dry and there were no crosswinds at the time of the landing, although passengers who were on board reported gusty winds and snow blown over the runway as the plane was descending.
An audio recording from the air traffic control tower at Pearson indicates the pilots were warned about a potential air flow “bump” in the glide path caused by an aircraft in front of them when they received clearance to land just after 2 p.m. EST.
Flint was questioned about the condition of the runway and asked whether wind gusts played a role in the plane’s crash, but she declined to comment while the investigation is underway.
What Happened?
Video footage of the landing shows the plane hitting the runway hard and flames shooting into the air before the aircraft skidded onto its side and then overturned. Photos of the upended aircraft show one wing sheared off and the landing gear pointing skyward.Passengers, who were buckled into their seats, were left dangling upside down before taking off their seat belts to drop down to the ceiling of the plane. Video footage shows flight crew and emergency responders quickly ushering passengers off the plane through both of its doors.
“The crew of Delta flight 4819 heroically led passengers to safety evacuating a jet that had overturned on the runway, on landing amidst smoke and fire,” GTAA’s CEO Flint said. “I thank each and every one of these heroes, every flight attendant and crew member on Delta flight 4819.”
Who Is Investigating?
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada is leading the investigation, assisted by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, Delta’s incident response team, and Mitsubishi, the maker of the CRJ900 aircraft (originally made by Bombardier).Seven members of the Transportation Safety Board of Canada arrived at the airport on Feb. 17 to begin the investigation, and 13 more investigators arrived on-site on Feb. 18, Flint said. FAA investigators were also at the scene of the crash.
“We do expect that the investigators on-site will be reviewing the aircraft on its current configuration on the runway for the next 48 hours,” Flint said, noting that more information on the cause of the crash will be released as the investigation unfolds.
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada said it is examining the runway and the wreckage on-site and has sent the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder to a lab for further analysis.
Are There Ongoing Delays?
The probe into the Feb. 17 crash has resulted in the closure of two runways. The damaged aircraft will not be moved from the runway until investigators are finished on the scene, Flint said.Once that portion of the probe is complete, the GTAA will do its inspections “and then return that runway into service,” she added.