Author Archives: aradmin

Heathrow tube strike called off

A tube strike that threatened to bring the Piccadilly tube line to Heathrow to a standstill today has been called off.

The RMT union has halted its industrial action, due to begin at noon today, to continue talks with the management of Transport for London.

London Underground’s chief operating Officer Phil Hufton said: “I am pleased that we have been able to reach an agreement with the RMT which means that strike action will be suspended on the 4th and 5th December.

“This dispute is over a number of local issues, all of which have been resolved or which we have committed to addressing including honouring outstanding annual leave.

“‘This agreement demonstrates what can be achieved when all parties are committed to engaging in constructive discussions.”

 

Wednesday, December 4, 2013


Student jailed for abusing flight crew and passengers

A student who terrified holidaymakers on a Thomas Cook flight to Ibiza has been jailed.

Kyle Bent, who also worked as a personal trainer, shouted at passengers and swung from seats as the plane came into land on the Spanish island.

The 25-year-old also threatened staff during the late-night flight from Manchester in July this year, said the Daily Mail.

Trafford Magistrates jailed the Manchester Metropolitan University student for 10 weeks after he admitted two public order offence for using threatening or abusive behaviour.

His solicitor Karl Miles told the court Bent, who he claimed suffered from Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, regretted his behaviour.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

 


Air New Zealand Starts Smartphone and Tablet Check-ins


Air New Zealand 767-300

Air New Zealand 767-300 (Photo credit: planegeezer)

Air New Zealand has started offering check-in on smartphones and tablets via a new app for both iPhone and Android devices. The facility allows check-in for both domestic and international flights from anywhere 24 hours before departure.

Check-in on smartphones can be done up until 90 minutes prior to an international flight departure and 30 minutes before a domestic service. Customers can also choose seats and print boarding passes. The app delivers up-to-date flight information as well as details about the airports that customers are flying into and out of. It also enables customers to view their personal travel details along with traffic and weather forecasts.

Air New Zealand general manager customer experience Calum Laming said: “Both the Air NZ mobile app and online check-in offer customers a new level of convenience, saving them valuable time, allowing them to check-in remotely and to print their boarding pass from home. “Customers can also use their smartphone as their boarding pass with the app recognised by Air New Zealand kiosks.”

Air New Zealand Chief Information Officer Julia Raue said the latest technology is a total rebuild of the airline’s mPass mobile app. “We have thought long and hard as to what would improve our mobile app and make our customers’ travel more seamless regardless of where they are flying. I believe the new Air NZ mobile app will do just that, offering them both what they want and need in an easy-to-navigate application.”

– See more at: http://www.travolution.co.uk/Articles/2013/12/04/7359/air+new+zealand+launches+app+for+online+and+smartphone+check-in.html#sthash.Zfh6Uyww.dpuf

 


Seattle-Atlanta flight diverted to Spokane after teen dies

A Delta Airlines flight from Seattle to Atlanta was diverted to Spokane Saturday morning after a 16-year-old boy died on board.

Airport spokesman Todd Woodard says the teen suffered some kind of medical emergency on Flight 128 Saturday morning and passed away reportedly of natural causes.

Delta spokesman Michael Thomas says there were 258 passengers on the Boeing 767. They exited the aircraft at Spokane and some were being rebooked onto other flights to get to their destinations. Delta was flying in another crew Saturday afternoon to fly the remaining passengers to Atlanta.

“Despite resuscitation attempts by Engine 6 assisted by AMR SIA, the young patient did not survive. The military family was traveling with the teen to Atlanta for a family Christmas. Thoughts and prayers from all of us at the SFD for the family and their extended Army Family,” the Spokane Fire Department posted on their Facebook page. 

Teen dies aboard Delta flight soon after takeoff

KHQ

Delta Airlines Flight 128 sits on the tarmac at Spokane International Airport after being diverted shortly after takeoff due to a medical emergency onboard.

A Delta Airlines flight from Seattle to Atlanta was rerouted to Spokane International Airport in Washington state shortly after takeoff on Saturday due to a medical emergency that left a 16-year-old male passenger dead, officials said. 

Spokane International officials stated that the teenager “regretfully died” shortly after Delta Flight 128 took off, bound for Atlanta. Pilots diverted to Spokane, the closest airport, upon learning of the emergency.


The cause of death was not immediately known. Local authorities and a medical examiner were summoned to the airport, NBC affiliate KHQ reported.

The teenager was not immediately identified, but the Atlanta Journal-Constitution quoted Spokane Assistant Fire Chief Brian Schaeffer as saying that he was originally from the Atlanta metro area and was accompanying an unspecified number of family members to visit relatives in Georgia for Christmas. His father is in the military and is stationed in Washington, Schaeffer told the newspaper.

The newspaper quoted Joe Ryan, a passenger aboard the plane, as saying that the medical emergency occurred shortly after takeoff.

“The plane never really got too high,” he said. “The pilot all of the sudden got on the intercom and said there was a passenger in dire need (of medical attention).” 

Ryan said the teen and what he believed to be the teen’s family members were seated somewhere in the plane behind him. The teen was taken to the rear of the jet where flight attendants and possibly others attempted lifesaving measures, Ryan said.

The remaining 258 passengers were removed from the plane and have boarded others, continuing to their destination, officials said.

Delta representatives did not release the name of the teenager and did not say if attempts to revive the boy continued after the plane landed.

Teenager dies aboard Delta flight soon after takeoff from Seattle

A Delta Airlines flight from Seattle to Atlanta was rerouted to Spokane International Airport in Washington state shortly after takeoff on Saturday due to a medical emergency that left a 16-year-old male passenger dead, officials said. 

Spokane International officials stated that the teenager “regretfully died” shortly after Delta Flight 128 took off, bound for Atlanta. Pilots diverted to Spokane, the closest airport, upon learning of the emergency.

The cause of death was not immediately known. Local authorities and a medical examiner were summoned to the airport, NBC affiliate KHQ reported.

The remaining 258 passengers were removed from the plane and have boarded others, continuing to their destination, officials said.

Delta representatives did not release the name of the teenager and did not say if attempts to revive the boy continued after the plane landed.

Hole In Plane Wing Forces Delta Flight's Emergency Landing In Madrid

A Delta Airlines flight bound for New York was forced to make an emergency landing in Madrid Wednesday, after a hydraulics problem burst open part of the plane’s wing shortly after takeoff.

Startled passengers aboard the Boeing 767-300ER snapped pictures of the jet’s damaged wing, from which a compartment panel had fallen, exposing “mechanical innards,” writes the New York Daily News. In one picture, an unidentified mechanical component sits on the wing, next to the hole from which it appears to have burst.

(Story continues below.)

Delta spokesman Morgan Durrant told The Associated Press the plane landed safely, and that none of the 200 passengers or 11 crew members aboard were injured. Durrant declined to comment further, citing the ongoing investigation.

The Local, an English-language Spanish news site, pointed to a tweet from Madrid air traffic controllers which said a hydraulics issue is thought to be the cause of the wing damage.

In an emailed statement to The Huffington Post, a Delta spokesperson added:

After receiving indication of a hydraulics issue after departure, the flight crew of Delta flight 415 from Madrid to New York-JFK returned to Madrid. Upon landing, tires on the main landing gear deflated and the aircraft came to rest … safely on the airfield. Buses were dispatched to deplane customers back to the terminal. There are no reports of injuries.

Safety is always Delta’s top priority. The aircraft, a Boeing 767-300ER, is being examined by technicians. There were 200 customers and 11 crew members on the flight. Customers are being re-accommodated on other flights today.

Delta: No special treatment for NCAA team


(CNN) –

Delta Airlines said Tuesday that it didn’t bump 50 passengers just to accommodate the travel plans of a nationally ranked college basketball team on Sunday, one of the busiest travel days of the year.

A spokesman for the carrier said the plane the 15th-ranked University of Florida Gators were supposed to use had an engine problem, so the carrier put them on another jet out of Gainesville while workers tried to fix the issue.

When the problem couldn’t be solved, Delta booked many of the 50 passengers headed to Atlanta on a later flight. A handful of passengers left on flights Monday, Morgan Durrant said.

The story made national sports websites Monday with headlines like “Delta bumps entire flight to accommodate the Florida basketball team,” but Durrant said the fact that it was a charter flight played no role in the plane swap. Flight schedules weigh heavily on operational decisions, he said.

The Gators were due to take off at 3 p.m., and the commercial flight was scheduled to depart about a half-hour later. ExpressJet, the regional carrier that operated both flights, assured Delta that it would have the problem solved in time, Durrant said.

“We don’t bias toward the chartered side of the business,” Durrant said, pointing out that such flights make up a tiny percentage of Delta’s business. “All of our customers have somewhere to go.”

Earlier, Durant told CNN that none of the 50 passengers had been pulled off their original flight, and they were all offered vouchers toward a future flight.

A spokesman for the Gators said they had no idea the planes had been swapped.

“UF was not part of the decision-making process,” Denver Parler said. “We arrived, boarded and departed as we normally would.”

The Gators lost the Monday game, by the way, dropping a last-second 65-64 decision to the Connecticut Huskies.

Delta delays travelers to accommodate Gators basketball team

Gators basketball

Florida Gators head coach Billy Donovan talks to his players as they take on the Connecticut Huskies in the second half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion. UConn defeated Florida Gators 65-64.
( David Butler II-USA TODAY / December 2, 2013)

UConn Huskies knock off Florida Gators

Delta Airlines left a group of irritated travelers in the wake of the Gators basektball team on Sunday after mechanical problems grounded the team charter to Connecticut.

The Gainesville Sun reported that dozens of people missed their connections after Delta Airlines canceled a flight from Gainesville to Atlanta and re-designated the 50-seat airplane as a charter for the Gators.

Delta Connection Flight 5059 was scheduled to leave at 3:26 p.m., but some of the passengers were dealyed until as late as Monday. One passenger told the Sun that others had to be driven to airports in Jacksonville, Orlando and Tampa to catch alternate flights.

One passenger missed a funeral, while another had to be driven by her father to Atlanta, the Sun reported.

The Gators were scheduled to meet Connecticut at 7 p.m. Monday night.

“It just felt like the wrong decision made by somebody who didn’t think it through,” the passenger, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Sun.

She said passengers were told their plane had a mechanical failure, but then some noticed through a window the Gators were boarding their airplane.

Delta spokesman Michael Thomas told the Sun passengers were booked on other flights and given vouchers for future travel.

Delta also made a statement through UF, stating, “the University of Florida in no way participated in the decision-making process.”

The Gators would go on to lose the game game 65-64 when Uconn guard Shabazz Napier hit a buzzer-beating jump shot.

The Gators found another way to frustrate some their fan base a day after the school wrapped up its first losing football season since 1979.

Read the full story here.

Email Edgar Thompson at egthompson@orlandosentinel.com. Read the Swamp Things blog at www.orlandosentinel.com/swampthings. Follow our UF coverage on Twitter @osgators.