Officials want to permanently keep helicopters away from commercial jets taking off and landing at a busy Washington, D.C., airport after the deadliest U.S. aviation accident in more than two decades.
Crews have finished recovering the wreckage of a plane and helicopter that collided mid-air, killing 67 people.
The FAA has reopened two runways at Reagan Airport following the Jan. 29 plane crash between an American Airlines flight and a Black Hawk helicopter.
The FAA had closed two of DCA's three runways so investigators could piece together how the January accident occurred when an ...
All three runways at Reagan National Airport outside of D.C. have reopened, with plane activity slowly returning to normal ...
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TravelPulse on MSNFAA Reopens Two Runways at Washington's Reagan Airport After Deadly Mid-Air CollisionOfficials have reopened two runways at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport nearly two weeks after a deadly mid-air collision. On Tuesday, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) confirmed that ...
Officials previously closed runways and decreased the arrivals rate to aid the investigation into the Jan. 29 crash that ...
Salvage crews continue to remove parts of the American Airlines jet before they turn their focus to the Black Hawk helicopter.
The Unified Command team told reporters Sunday evening they would begin lifting wreckage from the water first thing Monday morning ...
During a press conference on Thursday morning, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the crash was "absolutely" ...
Kiah Duggins was among the passengers on American Airlines Flight 5342 that collided with a helicopter on Wednesday night.
WUSA9 Chief Meteorologist Topper Shutt said ... "All takeoffs and landings have been halted at DCA," Reagan Airport said at around 9:15 p.m. on Wednesday. "Emergency personnel are responding ...
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