It was supposed to be a routine landing. A flight from Montreal carrying 76 passengers touched down at New York’s LaGuardia Airport — and in the moments that followed, the lives of everyone on board changed forever. What investigators are now revealing about the crash that shook one of America’s busiest airports is both devastating and deeply sobering. Two men who showed up to work that night never made it home.
Late on a quiet runway at LaGuardia Airport in Queens, New York, an Air Canada Express jet made its final approach from Montreal. The Bombardier CRJ-900, operating as Jazz Aviation Flight 8646 on behalf of Air Canada, carried 76 passengers who were likely tired from travel, perhaps scrolling their phones, thinking about the people waiting for them at arrivals.
None of them could have anticipated what was about to happen.
As the aircraft touched down on Runway 4, it collided with a Port Authority fire truck that had been dispatched to handle a separate incident elsewhere on the airport grounds. The impact was sudden and violent — the plane struck the vehicle at approximately 24 miles per hour, according to tracking data from FlightRadar24. The forward underside of the fuselage was severely damaged, and the cockpit itself was left tilted at an alarming angle. Video footage that circulated online in the hours following the crash showed the full, gut-wrenching extent of the damage.
The 76 passengers were evacuated. They walked away.
But two people did not.
The pilot and co-pilot — the two men at the controls, responsible for safely delivering every one of those passengers — were killed. Their names have not yet been publicly released, but they were professionals who dedicated their careers to getting others safely from one place to another. That night, they paid the ultimate price.
Two Port Authority workers — a sergeant and an officer — who were inside the fire truck at the time of the collision were rushed to hospital. As of the latest update, both are reported to be in stable condition, being treated for broken limbs. Their recovery, while painful, gives their families reason to hold on.
In the aftermath, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered LaGuardia Airport closed until at least 2 p.m. Monday, bringing one of the nation’s most traffic-heavy airports to a standstill. The National Transportation Safety Board quickly deployed an investigative team to the scene, tasked with piecing together the chain of events that led to this tragedy — and, crucially, ensuring nothing like it ever happens again.
The question that now hangs heavy in the air: how does a fire truck end up on an active runway at the exact moment a plane is landing? That is precisely what investigators are working to understand.
For the families of the two crew members lost, there are no easy answers — only grief, and the quiet pride of knowing their loved ones spent their final moments doing the job they loved.
Every time we board a flight, we place an extraordinary amount of trust in the people we never see — the pilots, the ground crews, the air traffic controllers. We settle into our seats, put on our headphones, and never think about the invisible web of people working to bring us home safely. Stories like this one remind us that behind every flight number, there are human beings. People with families. People who deserved to come home too.
As the investigation unfolds and more details emerge, let’s hold space for the two lives lost on that runway — and for the loved ones left behind to make sense of an ordinary night that became anything but.