Union praises pilots who brought plane down on belly at Newark after landing gear problem

By AP
Monday, January 11, 2010

Union praises pilots who landed crippled jet in NJ

NEW YORK — The crew of a plane that landed with a belly flop at Newark Liberty International Airport on Sunday “did everything right” as they brought the jetliner down after a landing gear malfunctioned, a pilots union said.

Herb Hunter, spokesman for the United Airlines branch of the Air Line Pilots Association, said the union was happy that the 48 passengers and five employees got off the Airbus A319 “safe and sound.” The pilots have not been named.

The frightening episode began Sunday morning as Flight 634 from Chicago to Newark was descending on its runway approach.

Suddenly the plane started rising again and circling the airport, “so we knew something was wrong,” said Jim Falk, of Middletown, N.J., who was sitting near the front.

The captain, who sounded composed, announced over the intercom that there was an issue with some of the landing gear on the Airbus A319, passengers said. Then he told them they’d be landing in three minutes — and that they should gird themselves for a crash, Falk said.

When the aircraft landed, part of its belly struck the runway, United spokeswoman Robin Urbanski said, and part of its right wing was damaged.

But the passengers, who cheered and sighed with relief, said the landing seemed controlled, and they praised the skillful pilot.

“It was truly a very nice, smooth landing,” said passenger John Wiman, a 51-year-old food service packaging salesman from Chicago. “Very gently, the plane tilted to the right. The engine made contact with the runway. I didn’t hear much noise and I didn’t see sparks. Other passengers did see some sparks.”

It wasn’t immediately clear what caused the malfunction, said Urbanski, the spokeswoman for Chicago-based United, a subsidiary of UAL Corp.

The plane was moved early Monday from the runway to a hangar.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Arlene Salac said investigators from her agency would inspect the plane and interview the pilots. She said no further information would be released until the investigation was completed — something that might take weeks or months.

Another United spokeswoman, Megan McCarthy, said the company has also been in touch with the National Transportation Safety Board but has not been notified that the agency is investigating the landing.

McCarthy said the airline’s other A319s are still flying, and no special inspections are planned. She noted that landing gear on all of its planes are checked daily.

“Having reviewed flight data from our Airbus fleet, we found the data from Flight 634 unique to this aircraft, and we are continuing to investigate the cause of the landing gear malfunction,” she said.

Mulvihill reported from Haddonfield, N.J. AP Airlines Writer Joshua Freed in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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