PEARSON DELAYS CONTINUE: Investigations continue into Delta crash

Delays at Toronto’s Pearson airport continued Wednesday as investigators worked to determine the cause of the fiery crash landing of a Delta Air Lines plane. Investigators with the Transportation Safety Board of Canada said Tuesday they had recovered the plane’s black box and sent it off for analysis, but it was too soon to say what led to the crash.

Delays at Toronto’s Pearson airport continued Wednesday as investigators worked to determine the cause of the fiery crash landing of a Delta Air Lines plane and crews began removing parts of the wreckage.

Two of Pearson’s five runways, including the “busiest” in Canada, remain closed, said the airport’s duty manager Jake Keating. The airport had capped departures throughout the day and a similar step had been taken to manage arrivals.

“This is put in place in an effort to sort of make sure that we’re not overwhelming the airfield and making sure that we’re maximizing our capabilities on the available runways that we have,” he said in an interview with TV station CP24 Wednesday morning.

The airport’s website listed dozens of cancelled and delayed flights Wednesday. Sunwing Airlines said in a statement that it had to cancel several southbound flights departing from Pearson in order to “prioritize the safe return of customers” currently delayed in various destinations.

Once the Delta plane wreckage is removed, Keating said delays would likely persist as the airport inspected the runway to make sure “everything is still in working order.”

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada said Wednesday that the aircraft wreckage will be moved to a hangar at Pearson airport “to be examined further” and that its investigators will also examine the runway before it’s reopened.

All 76 passengers and four crew members survived Monday afternoon’s crash landing when the plane hit the tarmac and then tipped over, creating a fireball as its wing scraped along the ground before it rolled over and came to a stop in a cloud of smoke. In an update on Wednesday, the airline said 20 of the 21 passengers initially sent to local hospitals had been released.

“Delta and Endeavor teams remain in Toronto and are co-operating fully as participants in the investigation,” the airline said in a statement. Endeavor, its subsidiary, was the operator of the flight from Minneapolis to Toronto.

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