March 23rd, 2026

Two pilots flying Air Canada jet killed in collision with fire truck at NY airport

By Canadian Press on March 23, 2026.

NEW YORK — Two pilots were killed and 41 people taken to hospital after an Air Canada jet carrying 72 passengers and four crew collided with a fire truck on a runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport late Sunday night.

Of the 41 people transported to two hospitals in Queens, nine were still in care, including some in serious condition, Kathryn Garcia, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, told a news conference early Monday morning.

Disaster struck shortly after 11:30 p.m. Sunday as Flight AC8646 — operated by Air Canada Express carrier Jazz Aviation — touched down after its journey from Montréal Trudeau International Airport.

In the moments before the collision, the firefighting truck was responding to a separate incident on a United Airlines flight that had aborted its takeoff and reported a strange odour on board. Air traffic control recordings suggested the odour on the plane had made some flight attendants feel ill. LaGuardia controllers were also mobilizing a stair truck in case the plane needed to let people off.

One air traffic control could be heard on a radio transmission giving clearance to a vehicle to cross part of the tarmac, then trying to stop it.

“Stop, Truck 1. Stop,” the transmission says. The controller can then be heard frantically diverting incoming aircraft from landing.

In the aftermath of the collision, one staffer sought to console another. “That wasn’t good to watch,” says one.

“I know. I tried to reach out,” says the second person. “We were dealing with an emergency earlier.”

“You did the best you could,” says the first.

Garcia deferred additional questions about the sequence of events leading up to the crash to investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board.

Photos from the scene showed the jetliner on the ground, surrounded by red rescue vehicles, in the glare of portable floodlights. It sat on its tail, its crumpled nose pointed toward the sky, the cockpit peeled back all the way back to the side windows, exposing a shredded tangle of wires and flight controls.

Stairways used to evacuate passengers from aircraft were seen pushed up to the emergency exits on the white jet. A heavily damaged neon yellow fire truck was seen nearby, laying on its side.

Two Port Authority employees travelling in the fire truck suffered non-life-threatening injuries, Garcia said.

In a statement, Air Canada said it has officials en route to LaGuardia to assist in the investigation, adding, “We are deeply saddened by the loss of two Jazz employees, and our deepest condolences go out to the entire Jazz community and their families.”

Designed to carry 76 to 90 passengers for short- and medium-haul routes, the CRJ-900 is considered a workhorse feeder jet traditionally linking regions to bigger hub airports. The aircraft has a narrow, long fuselage, two-rear mounted turbofan engines and a T-shaped tail — the horizontal stabilizer sits high on the vertical fin.

Early Monday, some passengers who had arrived at LaGuardia hours before their flights hoping to beat security lines during the ongoing government funding lapse straggled out of the airport, rebooked for Tuesday. Others were hastening to other airports, as far as Long Island MacArthur in suburban Ronkonkoma, to try to catch their flights.

Garcia said the airport was to remain closed until at least 2 p.m. Monday to facilitate the investigation, which was being led by the U.S. transportation safety board. The Transportation Safety Board of Canada said Monday it was deploying a team of investigators to support the American agency.

On social media, Canadian Transport Minister Steven McKinnon wrote that Canada is working closely with U.S. authorities as they investigate. “Aviation safety remains our highest priority,” he said.

LaGuardia is one of the three major airports serving the New York City region. Located in the borough of Queens, it sits on the edge of Flushing Bay, east of Manhattan, with two main intersecting runways. It is extremely busy given its proximity to Manhattan and handles a heavy load of mostly domestic flights.

LaGuardia was 19th busiest in 2024 out of more than 500 U.S. airports, with over 16.7 million passengers boarding there, according to a 2025 FAA database.

The report by The Canadian Press was first published March 23, 2026.

— With files from Aaron Sousa, Nick Murray, Dean Bennett and The Associated Press

Kelly Geraldine Malone, The Canadian Press





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