Times Colonist

Boeing flight to B.C. makes emergency landing in Idaho

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BOISE, Idaho — An Air Canada Boeing 737 Max 8 landed safely in Idaho after experienci­ng an in-flight emergency Tuesday when pilots received a warning light in the flight deck, airline and airport officials said.

The issue was determined to be a faulty cargo hold indicator, Air Canada said.

Boeing has been under intense scrutiny from U.S. regulators and politician­s since January, when part of the fuselage on a Boeing 737 Max 9 jet blew out midflight, exposing a gaping hole and forcing pilots to make an emergency landing. It’s the deepest crisis for the aircraft manufactur­er since two crashes involving Max jets in 2018 in Indonesia and 2019 in Ethiopia.

On Tuesday, Air Canada said Flight 997, from Mexico City to Vancouver, diverted to Boise Airport as a precaution­ary measure after the warning light came on. The aircraft landed normally at 10:59 a.m. and was met by first responders, airline officials said. The plane will stay in Boise at least overnight, according to airline officials.

According to Transport Canada, the plane has been registered to Air Canada since January 2019. Its year of manufactur­e was also listed as 2019.

The 122 passengers and six crew members were waiting in Boise on Tuesday for a different jet to take them to Vancouver, airline officials said.

No injuries were reported, Boise Airport officials said.

Airline bosses have expressed their frustratio­n with Boeing, and even minor incidents involving jets the company produced are attracting extra attention.

A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 safely returned to Denver on Sunday after the engine cover fell off and struck the wing flap during takeoff, according to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

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