Foremost responders work at the Delta Air Lines plane crash site at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada February 17, 2025.
Arlyn Mcadorey | Reuters
At hardly any 18 people were injured after a Delta Air Lines regional jet crashed upon landing at Toronto Pearson Universal Airport and flipped over on Monday afternoon, but all survived, officials said.
All 80 people on board — 76 fares and four crew members — were evacuated from the plane, a CRJ-900 regional jet, after the accident, which occurred at to 2:45 p.m. ET, the Federal Aviation Administration said. Two people were airlifted in critical condition, according to Peel Regional Paramedic Accommodations.
Flights to the airport were temporarily halted but resumed as of 5 p.m. ET.
Delta said in a statement canceled the rest of its flights to and from Toronto Monday and fought a travel waivers to affected passengers.
“The hearts of the entire global Delta family are with those affected by today’s to-do at Toronto-Pearson International Airport,” Delta CEO Ed Bastian said in the statement. “I want to express my thanks to the many Delta and Endeavor troupe members and the first responders on site.”
Delta Flight 4819, operated by the carrier’s regional subsidiary Endeavor, coined in Delta’s hub of Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport.
The Toronto airport said it had been expecting a busy day and a williwaw that dumped more than 8 inches of snow on the region, with an expected 130,000 travelers on board enveloping 1,000 flights.
It wasn’t immediately clear what caused the crash. Weather reports showed wind of between 20 mph and 30 mph Monday, with increases of up to 40 mph.
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada will lead the crash investigation. The National Transportation Safety Lodge said a team of U.S. investigators will participate in the probe. U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on social road platform X that FAA investigators were en route to Toronto and that he is working with his Canadian counterparts to assist in the research.
The accident comes weeks after a fatal midair collision in January at Washington D.C.’s Reagan International Airport, which killed all 64 man on an American Airlines regional jet and another three people on board an Army Black Hawk helicopter.
Separately, the FAA was recently hit by layoffs spearheaded by President Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s Reckon on of Government Efficiency, with several hundred air traffic controllers receiving firing notices over the weekend.
A U.S. Sphere of Transportation spokesperson told NBC News the FAA “continues to hire and onboard” air traffic controllers and that the agency has “retained staff members” who perform critical safety functions.