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Deseret News Archives,

Friday, October 6, 2000


Airliner lands safely near Bryce
Canyon
Smoke in
cockpit, pressure loss trigger unscheduled stop


Associated Press


An
American Airlines flight headed from Denver to Los Angeles made an
emergency landing at a small airport in southern Utah Friday after
reporting smoke in the cockpit and a loss of cabin pressure.
Flight
2821, an MD-80, touched down about 8:45 a.m. at the Bryce Canyon
Airport less than a mile from the boundary of Bryce Canyon National
Park. Airport manager Greg Pollock said none of the 70 passengers or
five crew members on board were hurt and that the plane was not
damaged by the landing.
"It
was just actually a prudent decision on the captain's part,"
Pollock said.
American
Airlines said in a news release that there were reports of smoke and
fumes in the cabin, and the oxygen masks were automatically deployed.
Authorities were searching for the cause of the smoke and the
depressurization. No fire was reported.
Airline
officials said the passengers, who were waiting in the terminal, would
be bused to Las Vegas and then flown on to Los Angeles.
Airport
workers were awaiting word from American Airlines on how to remove the
plane from the small runway. Pollock said the plane had room to
maneuver, but it was uncertain whether it would be towed or taxi under
its own power.
American, which is based in Fort Worth, Texas, said the plane would be
ferried without passengers to a maintenance base.
Pollock
said the tiny airport, which handles charters and commuter planes, was
built for such emergency landings on the long stretch between Denver
and Las Vegas.
In 1947
a flight en route from Los Angeles to Chicago crashed just short of
the runway there, killing 54 people. It remains Utah's most deadly
plane crash.
 

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