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FAA examining Delta plane that struck tail of local jet

Delta Air Lines stated Tuesday the wing of among its planes struck a local jet while taxiing cab for departure at Atlanta airport, harming both aircraft.

The Federal Air travel Administration stated it will investigate the event that occurred at the crossway of two taxiways around 10:10 a.m. ET.

The airline company stated the wing of a Delta Plane A350 that was set to leave for Tokyo-Haneda struck the tail of an Undertaking Air CRJ-900 that was set up to department for LaFayette, Louisiana, resulting in damage to the tail of the local jet and the wing of the A350. Endeavor is an entirely owned Delta subsidiary. Delta stated there were reported injuries amongst the 221 guests on the A350 and 56 guests on the CRJ-900.

A variety of near miss and runway incursion events last year raised concerns about U.S. air travel security and the stress on understaffed air traffic control, triggering the National Transportation Security Board to require more innovation to avoid accidents.

FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker stated previously at an industry conference on Tuesday that the agency has deployed innovations at some airports that provides an alert if an aircraft is lined up on the wrong runway or on a taxiway.

We've started to deploy pretty simple off the shelf option for controllers to improve situational awareness, Whitaker stated stating close calls were down by more than half in the first half of the year. So there's progress, however we require to get better. There's no reason for that happening.

(source: Reuters)