Valley native discusses Pittsburgh plane scare

A Delta Air Lines plane skidded off the taxiway Wednesday night at Pittsburgh International Airport.

By TOM DAVIDSON

Trib Total Media

A Lower Burrell native was among the 77 people on board a Boeing 717 that slid off a taxiway before takeoff Wednesday evening at Pittsburgh International Airport.

Kristen Singleton, 46, had a window seat on Delta Air Lines Flight 2231. Sitting in the midsection of the plane, she was looking outside as the plane taxied to prepare for takeoff.

“All of a sudden I was looking at a ditch,” she said. “We were coming to the end of the runway to make a turn to take off the other way, and we just never stopped going at the end of the runway.”

It wasn’t until Singleton and other passengers used stairs to get off the plane that they realized how bad the situation could have been, she said.

No one was hurt, but the plane had slid partway into a ravine. The crew talked the passengers through the situation as they developed a plan to get them safely off the plane, Singleton said.

People who were sitting in front got off first to keep the weight toward the back of the plane, which remained on the taxiway.

Passengers were worried, but remained calm throughout, Singleton said.

“The crew was great. The ground crew was great,” she said. “It just kind of caught everyone off guard.”

As she rode in a bus back to the terminal, she asked a firefighter if he’d be worried about getting on another plane Wednesday night and he reassured her, Singleton said.

“You were the only plane this happened to,” she said he told her.

Singleton lives in Butler, where she’s a teacher at Butler Catholic School. She was flying to Atlanta and then to Tampa, Fla., to visit her parents.

She boarded another flight and arrived at 2:45 a.m. in Atlanta, slept in the airport before arriving later Thursday in Tampa, where it was 80 degrees, she said.

She’ll use the experience in the classroom, she said.

“This is definitely something that will be talked about for many years to come,” Singleton said.

Another of the passengers, Samantha Robinson, 28, said she elected to stay overnight in Pittsburgh before taking another flight to Atlanta Thursday night.

Robinson, an Elizabeth native, lives in Atlanta but plans to return to the Pittsburgh area later this year.

She also had a window seat and was sitting in the rear of the plane when it happened, she said.

Initially, she thought it was like “any other flight” — the pilot had warned passengers it had started to snow.

“Once the engine turned off, I thought it was kind of weird,” Robinson said. “That was kind of when I got a little more concerned.”

From the window, it appeared as if the plane had slid a few more feet it would have slid into a ravine.

“That was a little scary,” she said. “I wasn’t really nervous until I got off the plane.”

Delta paid for a hotel and she was relaxing Thursday before her flight to Atlanta, she said.

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