Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Air Canada Plane Slides Off Runway In Foggy Toronto's Pearson Airport, No One Injured

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2017 03:43 PM
  • Air Canada Plane Slides Off Runway In Foggy Toronto's Pearson Airport, No One Injured
TORONTO — The Transportation Safety Board is investigating after an Air Canada plane briefly left the runway while landing at Toronto Pearson Airport.
 
Air Canada spokeswoman Isabelle Arthur says the aircraft's landing gear left the runway for a short distance when landing Friday night.
 
TSB spokeswoman Julie Leroux says Flight 623 from Halifax was carrying 118 people and so far no injuries have been reported.
 
She says the Airbus A320 will be moved to a hangar at the airport to be examined.
 
Leroux adds that the investigators will ask for the flight data recorder — also known as a black box — as well as examine weather conditions, and conduct interviews with passengers and Air Canada.
 
Arthur says the airline is connecting passengers with hotel accommodations and limousines for those wishing to head home. She says luggage will be delivered once maintenance and the authorities "have finished reviewing events."
 
"We apologize for the inconvenience and will be in touch with our customers to follow up on the event and ensure they are all well taken care of," she says.
 
Paul Varian of Burlington, Ont., says he was one of the 112 passengers aboard the flight when the plane lurched left off the runway and came to a "very sudden stop."
 
Varian says passengers were thrown forward in their seats and a few oxygen masks dropped. He noticed brown and black debris on his window, which he says may have come from a blown-out tire beneath him.
 
"We could see that clearly there was a lot of mud on the underbelly and the left-hand side of the plane," he says. "The tires were completely blown out on the left-hand wheel ... but the plane didn't appear significantly damaged beyond that."
 
Varian says emergency responders were on the scene within minutes and it took about an hour and a half for passengers to be shuttled to a nearby terminal.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Liberal Budget Puts Squeeze On NDP's Big-ticket Promises, Say Experts

B.C. Liberal Budget Puts Squeeze On NDP's Big-ticket Promises, Say Experts
VICTORIA — The Liberal government's new budget tries to put the squeeze on British Columbia's Opposition New Democrats, just weeks before the start of a spring election campaign, say political experts.

B.C. Liberal Budget Puts Squeeze On NDP's Big-ticket Promises, Say Experts

Paramedics Called To Assist B.C. MLA After Health Issue At Legislature

Paramedics Called To Assist B.C. MLA After Health Issue At Legislature
Paramedics were called to British Columbia's legislature to treat a member of the house who fell ill during question period.

Paramedics Called To Assist B.C. MLA After Health Issue At Legislature

Vancouver Seeking Judicial Review Of Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

Council members have voted to go ahead with a judicial review of the provincial government's environmental assessment of the Trans Mountain project.

Vancouver Seeking Judicial Review Of Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

No Charges In Vancouver Double Murder, But Three Charged In Related Kidnapping

No Charges In Vancouver Double Murder, But Three Charged In Related Kidnapping
  Twenty-six-year-old Ellwood Bradbury and 33-year-old Matthew Stewart were taken into custody in Metro Vancouver, while Erlan Acosta was picked up in Mesquite, Texas, and is awaiting extradition.

No Charges In Vancouver Double Murder, But Three Charged In Related Kidnapping

Motorcyclist, Pedestrian Killed In Separate Crashes On Lower Mainland Roads

Motorcyclist, Pedestrian Killed In Separate Crashes On Lower Mainland Roads
Vancouver’s First Fatal Collision Of 2017, Elderly Pedestrian Killed Crossing Road In Abbotsford

Motorcyclist, Pedestrian Killed In Separate Crashes On Lower Mainland Roads

Welcome Relief for British Columbians with Student Loans

Welcome Relief for British Columbians with Student Loans
The reduction in interest rates will save students $1,500 in the course of repaying the average loan.

Welcome Relief for British Columbians with Student Loans