WASHINGTON -- The crew of the Army helicopter that collided in midair with an American Airlines jet near Washington, D.C.'s Ronald Reagan National Airport may have had inaccurate altitude readings in ...
In our news wrap Friday, NTSB investigators shared new details about the moments before last month’s deadly aircraft collision in D.C., a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to lift its ...
The NTSB says pilots of the airplane that crashed into a military helicopter in Washington, DC tried to quickly climb a second before the crash. The American Airlines flight crashed into a ...
More than 80 commercial planes have crashed in the U.S. since 1970.
In the wake of three deadly plane crashes, travelers have grown anxious about future travel plans. But transportation expert ...
Since the historic wildfires, some officials have suggested that every rebuilt home have fire-resistant materials and fire ...
In the latest aviation news, Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency plans to make quick repairs to the nation’s air traffic control system; a New York Times investigation details the depth of ...
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said during an interview that he plans to encourage air traffic controllers to keep working past the mandatory retirement age of 56, which he says would enhance ...
The President says the crash wouldn’t have happened if the air traffic control computer system was newer, and he plans to ...
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says crews have successfully taken all major pieces of wreckage from the D.C. plane crash ...
President Donald Trump on Thursday blamed last week's deadly collision of a passenger jet and Army helicopter on what he called an “obsolete” computer system used by U.S. air traffic controllers, and ...
The helicopter's designated route had a strict altitude limit of 200 feet, according to FAA charts. RELATED: Pilots, air traffic controllers flagged safety concerns at Reagan National Airport for ...