Toronto airport runway setup poses serious crash risk, safety board finds
TORONTO — A poorly laid out runway complex and pilots distracted by required tasks have led to potentially catastrophic situations at Canada’s busiest airport, federal safety authorities said on Thursday.
The finding comes from an investigation into 27 runway incursions at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport in which a landing plane either taxied onto, or almost taxied onto, a live runway despite explicit warnings from air traffic control — the equivalent of a distracted motorist blowing or almost blowing a stop sign.
“The incursions examined in this report involved flight crews who had been instructed to hold short, who had accurately read back that instruction, who understood they needed to stop, and who understood they were approaching an active runway,” said Kathy Fox, chairwoman of the Transportation Safety Board of Canada.
“However, despite those factors, these flight crews did not recognize the visual cues that identified the runway holding position, and so they didn’t stop as required.”