Los Angeles Times

Another scare on Southwest plane

A cracked window forces an emergency landing. No one hurt.

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

A Southwest Airlines jetliner flying from Chicago to New Jersey made an emergency landing Wednesday after one of its windows cracked, but the carrier said there were no signs of engine problems on the aircraft

No passengers were injured in the incident on Flight 957, which was diverted to Cleveland’s Hopkins Internatio­nal Airport. But it came barely two weeks after an engine failed on a flight from New York to Dallas, sending shrapnel into the fuselage and killing a passenger.

The Dallas carrier said that the New Jersey-bound plane was diverted for a “maintenanc­e review” after the outer layer of the multilayer window pane cracked. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion said it was investigat­ing the incident.

Such cracks are rare, with the FAA saying its data show only 26 reports of outer-pane failures in the entire history of the Boeing 737, which started service in 1967. Southwest’s entire fleet of more than 700 planes is composed of versions of the Boeing plane.

Southwest said that there were no problems with the engine, and the damage to the window didn’t cause a loss of cabin pressure or trigger deployment of oxygen masks.

“The flight landed uneventful­ly in Cleveland,” the carrier said.

Some of the 76 passengers on the plane told the Associated Press that they heard popping, and those sitting near the windows on the left side of the plane moved quickly away. After being shuttled on another plane, passengers lauded the plane’s crew for handling the situation smoothly.

Within minutes of the incident, news of the cracked window reached social media.

Images posted online seem to show that the damaged window was just behind and above the engine on the left wing of the plane.

After two incidents involving windows in a month, crisis-management expert Curtis Sparrer said Southwest’s reputation could be tarnished if the carrier doesn’t take bold action to assure passengers that its planes are safe.

“Every time you go on a Southwest plane you will now be looking at the windows and saying, ‘Will I be next?’ ” said Sparrer, a principal at Bospar PR in San Francisco.

Although neither the airline nor the FAA gave any preliminar­y reason for why the window may have cracked, airline consultant Robert Mann, a former American Airlines executive, said that windows are periodical­ly polished to remove crazing, tiny cracks that form in the acrylic windows from exposure to chemicals and the sun’s rays.

He said he couldn’t recall if the procedure itself ever caused a crack.

Last month’s fatal accident, according to federal investigat­ors, occurred when a metal blade in an engine broke off, causing the engine to fail and send shrapnel into the fuselage, shattering a window.

The woman sitting next to the window was killed. She was the first passenger fatality in the 51-year history of the airline and the first passenger death on a U.S. airline since 2009.

Southwest said it has nearly completed inspecting the engines on its fleet because of the April 17 incident.

Southwest executives announced last week that they expect revenue per mile, which tracks average prices, to drop 1% to 3% in the April-through-June quarter. They said that about 2 percentage points of the decline were attributab­le to slower sales since the accident on a flight from New York to Dallas.

Shares of Southwest closed down 73 cents, or 1.4%, to $52.21 on Wednesday.

 ?? Hayne Palmour IV San Diego Union-Tribune ?? A SOUTHWEST Airlines f light from Chicago to New Jersey was diverted to Cleveland because of a cracked window. Above, a Southwest jet over San Diego.
Hayne Palmour IV San Diego Union-Tribune A SOUTHWEST Airlines f light from Chicago to New Jersey was diverted to Cleveland because of a cracked window. Above, a Southwest jet over San Diego.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States