The Metropolitan Airports Commission invites the public to offer comment on the 20-year plan for a busy Minnesota GA airport.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is doubling down on trying to blame President Donald Trump for the Delta plane crash that happened in Toronto, Canada. In an overly dramatic speech Wednesday on the U.S. Senate floor, Schumer claimed that Trump’s layoffs at the FAA are making the skies less safe.
Minnesota authorities are in contact with airport officials as they continue to gather more information about the injury crash.
Delta CEO Ed Bastian defended the Trump administration's cuts to the FAA, saying they would not impact airline safety after a Delta plane crashed this week.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy defended the cuts. He said out of 45,000 FAA employees, less than 400 were let go.
At least 18 people were injured when a Delta Air Lines flight from Minneapolis crashed upon landing at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Canada, according to the FAA and local authorities.
Billy Nolen, a former acting Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) administrator, said Monday that now is the time for air traffic control upgrades. “[One of the things] I’ve testified both
Chuck Schumer criticized Trump's FAA layoffs after a Delta flight accident in Toronto on Monday, stressing the agency's safety role even for U.S. planes flying to Canada.
Flight CRJ-900 was inbound to Ontario from Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport when it skidded on the ice and flipped over, but amazingly only around fifteen people were injured after a chill
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt fact-checked Sen. Chuck Schumer's, D-N.Y., claim that President Trump's at fault for airliner that crashed in Toronto on Monday.
The flight from MSP crashed at Toronto Pearson Monday afternoon with 80 people on board. Officials report no fatalities.
A Delta Air Lines flight from Minneapolis crashed and overturned while landing at Toronto Pearson Airport on Monday afternoon.