The Columbus Dispatch

Dozens hurt on turbulent Hawaii flight

- Audrey Mcavoy

HONOLULU – A flight from Phoenix to Honolulu carrying many people traveling for the holidays encountere­d severe turbulence shortly before landing, sending some unrestrain­ed people and objects flying about the cabin and seriously injuring 11, officials and passengers said.

In all, 36 people received medical treatment following Sunday’s turbulent Hawaiian Airlines flight for bumps, bruises, cuts and nausea, said Jim Ireland, director of Honolulu Emergency Medical Services. Twenty people were taken to hospitals, including 11 in serious condition.

“We are also very happy, and we feel fortunate that there were not any deaths or other critical injuries. And we’re also very hopeful that all will recover and make a full recovery,” Ireland said.

The full flight had nearly 300 people aboard and carried many passengers traveling to Hawaii for the holidays, like Jacie Hayata Ano, who was heading home.

“It was just rocky,” she told KHONTV. “And then, it quickly just escalated to the point where we’re shaking so much that we were pretty much like floating off of our chairs.”

Passenger Jodette Neely told NBC’S “Today” show that she saw people hitting their heads on the aircraft’s ceiling.

“I was grabbing the seat in front of me, the top of it, to hang on, even though I had my seat belt on,” she said.

Hawaiian Airlines Chief Operating Officer Jon Snook said such turbulence is isolated and unusual, noting that the airline hadn’t experience­d anything like it in recent history. Three flight attendants were among the injured, he said.

Passenger Kaylee Reyes told Hawaii News Now that her mother had just sat down when the turbulence hit and had not had a chance to buckle her safety belt.

“She flew up and hit the ceiling,”

Reyes said.

Jazmin Bitanga, who was also traveling home for the holidays, said there were two drops in altitude, including one that was so strong it sent her boyfriend’s water bottle into the plane’s ceiling.

“I turned around and there was a couple of people bleeding and just bracing themselves,” she told Hawaii News Now. “Just all around me, there were people crying.”

There was some internal damage to the aircraft during the turbulence, Snook said. The fasten-seat belts sign was on at the time, though some of those injured weren’t wearing them, he said.

Thomas Vaughan, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Honolulu, said there had been a weather advisory for thundersto­rms that included Oahu and areas that would have included the flight path at the time of the turbulence.

The airline was aware of the weather forecast and the unstable air and weather conditions, but had no warning that the particular patch of air where the turbulence occurred “was in any way dangerous,” Snook said.

He didn’t know how much altitude the plane lost during the turbulence, saying that would be part of an investigat­ion involving the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

 ?? COURTESY OF JAZMIN BITANGA VIA AP ?? An oxygen mask is released after turbulence hit a Hawaiian Airlines flight traveling to Honolulu on Sunday.
COURTESY OF JAZMIN BITANGA VIA AP An oxygen mask is released after turbulence hit a Hawaiian Airlines flight traveling to Honolulu on Sunday.

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