Charlie Kirk Mentor Dies In Freak Pickleball Accident

Jeff Webb, a man seen as a "mentor" to the late Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, died Thursday at the age of 76 from a pickleball accident.

The Daily Caller President Trump Holds Swearing-In Ceremony For Interim U.S. Attorney For D.C. Jeanine Pirro ©(Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Varsity Spirit, the cheerleading organization founded by Webb, announced that Webb suffered from severe head trauma after falling during a pickleball game two weeks before his death. His family eventually decided to take him off life support.

Webb was a conservative political activist and close confidant toKirk, whodiedfrom a gunshot wound to the neck on Sept. 10, 2025. He frequently spoke about Kirk's impact following the assassination, and once said the nation lost a potential future president.

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"We may have lost a future president. Charlie Kirk had it all—charisma, faith, respect for everyone… Now, in his absence, tens of thousands of new chapters are rising. His legacy is just beginning," Webb toldReal America's Voicein September.(RELATED: OnlyFans Owner Leonid Radvinsky Dead At 43)

Webb also attended the ceremony where President Donald Trump posthumouslyawardedKirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

WebbfoundedVarsity Spirit in 1974 and was instrumental in shaping modern-day cheerleading competitions. A spokesperson for Varsity Brandssaidthe organization was "saddened" by Webb's passing in a statement.

"Jeff played a pivotal role in shaping cheerleading as it exists today and in building a community that has impacted generations of athletes, coaches, and teams," the organization said. "In recent years, his contributions helped grow the sport both in the United States and globally, including his work with the International Cheer Union, which achieved full recognition by the International Olympic Committee in 2021."

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Charlie Kirk Mentor Dies In Freak Pickleball Accident

Jeff Webb, a man seen as a "mentor" to the late Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, died Thursday at the ag...
Pope Leo moves Father Flanagan of Boys Town fame closer to possible sainthood

Pope Leo XIV put the Rev.Edward Joseph Flanagana step closer topossible sainthoodMonday as he proclaimed the "heroic virtues" of the founder of Boys Town, a Nebraska home for at-risk youths that gained national renown and inspired an Oscar-winning biopic performance.

Associated Press FILE - Boys Town students hold portraits of Boys Town founder Father Edward Flanagan outside St. Cecilia Cathedral in Omaha, Neb., Feb. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File) FILE - Father Edward J. Flanagan, founder of Boy's Town, Nebraska, speaks into a microphone at Meiji Stadium in Tokyo, May 28, 1947 during a Japanese Boy Scout Jamboree. At right, wearing his school uniform, is Crown Prince Akahito. (AP Photo/Charles Gorry, File) The tomb of the Rev. Edward Flanagan is seen in Dowd Memorial Chapel in Boys Town, Neb., on Sept. 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Peter Smith) A statue of the Rev. Edward Flanagan is seen outside the home where he lived in Boys Town, Neb., on Sept. 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Peter Smith)

Vatican US Father Flanagan

With Leo's proclamation, the priest commonly known as "Father Flanagan" is now officially declared "venerable." Later steps on a possible path of sainthood would include beatification and ultimately canonization.

Omaha Archbishop Michael McGovern said he is "overjoyed" with the news.

"We continue to pray that he will one day be beatified and ultimately declared a saint," the archbishop said in a statement. "In the meantime, may we work to affirm the dignity of every person created in God's image by serving the poor, the abandoned and the vulnerable, especially at-risk youth."

Flanagan was born in Ballymoe, Ireland, in 1886 and immigrated to the U.S. in 1904. He was ordained a priest in 1912 and began work in the Diocese of Omaha in 1913.

He provided shelter for homeless men, whose stories convinced him that many adult troubles are rooted in broken homes and parental neglect, according to his biography on the website of the Father Flanagan League, a society dedicated to promoting his cause for sainthood.

Flanagan began mentoring boys in the juvenile justice system and established his first home for boys in 1917 in downtown Omaha. In 1921, he bought a farm on the western outskirts of Omaha and began building what became the campus known as Boys Town, still located there in a village of the same name.

By the 1930s, hundreds of boys lived at the site, which included a school and dormitories where boys elected their own mayor, council and commissioners, according to the organization's website.

Flanagan traveled to postwar Japan to help develop a child welfare program. In 1946, he visited his native Ireland and criticized its system of putting children in industrial schools and reformatories, decrying them as exploitative.

Flanagan died of a heart attack in 1948 at age 61 while visiting Germany. His tomb at Dowd Memorial Chapel in Boys Town displays one of his most famous quotations: "There are no bad boys. There is only bad environment, bad example, bad thinking."

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His work was depicted in the 1938 movie, "Boys Town," starring Spencer Tracy as a heroic Flanagan and Mickey Rooney as one of the boys in his care. The movie yielded Oscar wins for Tracy (best actor) and for writing (original story).

The Boys Town organization has opened various locations around the country and began admitting girls to its residential programs in 1979.

The Boys Town organization applauded the Vatican announcement in a Facebook post Monday.

Flanagan "believed that children had the right to be valued, to have the basic necessities of life and to be protected," it said. "His lifesaving work continues across the country today."

Flanagan is the second U.S. cleric with Midwestern connections to be moved closer to sainthood this year under the pontificate of theChicago-born Pope Leo. In February, the Vatican approved the beatification ceremony ofArchbishop Fulton Sheenin his native Illinois after years of delays.

The Vatican's Dicastery for the Causes of Saints reviewed a lengthy dossier on Flanagan's life, writings and works. Leo on Monday signed the decree attesting that Flanagan lived a life of heroic virtue. Such a decree doesn't mean he was free of sin or mistakes, but it means he had a reputation of holiness by living all the Christian virtues in a heroic manner.

The next step toward possible sainthood is beatification. For Flanagan to be beatified, the postulator — the person responsible for advancing the cause — has to find someone who was miraculously healed by praying for Flanagan's intercession. The process involves vetting by theological and medical experts. If convinced, the dicastery sends the case to the pope, who signs a decree saying the candidate can be beatified.

A second miracle is needed to declare the candidate a saint. Martyrs — people killed for their faith — can be beatified without a miracle. A miracle is needed, however, for martyrs to be canonized.

A pope can also bypass the miracle requirements in declaring a saint, as Pope Francis did on occasion during his 12-year papacy. Francis canonizedSt. Junipero Serraduring a 2015 Washington, D.C., visit even though the Vatican hadn't confirmed a second miracle attributed to his intercession.

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP'scollaborationwith The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

Pope Leo moves Father Flanagan of Boys Town fame closer to possible sainthood

Pope Leo XIV put the Rev.Edward Joseph Flanagana step closer topossible sainthoodMonday as he proclaimed the "heroic...
Hyundai recalls 58,000 Palisade SUVs in South Korea due to automatic seat problem

SEOUL, March 24 (Reuters) - South Korea's transport ministry announced on Tuesday the recall of 58,000 Hyundai Motor Palisade hybrid sport utility vehicles nationwide ‌over safety concerns, following a fatal accident in the United States earlier ‌this month.

Reuters

Hyundai stopped sales of some high-end versions of its new Palisade SUVs and recalled 68,500 ​new Palisade SUVs in the United States and Canada after a two-year-old girl in Ohio died on March 7. Local media reports said the automatic seat collapsed on the child sitting in the third row of a Palisade SUV. Hyundai has said it ‌is investigating what happened.

On Monday, ⁠Hyundai reported that two passengers of Palisade SUVs in South Korea had been injured in October and December last year possibly ⁠due to a problem with the automatic seats.

That came after the automaker reported to the U.S. safety regulator last week four injuries in the United States linked to the ​power ​seat issue.

South Korea's transport ministry said the ​Palisade's second- and third-row seats failed ‌to detect contact with occupants or objects due to inadequate software design in the seat controllers, posing safety risks.

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On Friday, Hyundai started offering software updates to address safety concerns as an interim step, the transport ministry said, adding that Hyundai is considering additional measures to enhance safety.

Palisade was Hyundai's top-selling SUV in South Korea ‌last year. Meritz Securities said in a ​report that should the recall involve hardware replacement, ​it would cost the automaker about ​100 billion won ($66.08 million), adding the automaker could face potential ‌class-action lawsuits and punitive damage claims.

Under the ​software update, Hyundai ​Motor will make it easier to turn off the automatic-folding function, with a single switch operation. Previously, a person needed to turn the car off ​and back on before ‌disabling the power seat feature.

The update will also restrict activation of the ​power seat function to when the tailgate is open.

($1 = 1,513.3000 won)

(Reporting ​by Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Hyundai recalls 58,000 Palisade SUVs in South Korea due to automatic seat problem

SEOUL, March 24 (Reuters) - South Korea's transport ministry announced on Tuesday the recall of 58,000 Hyundai Motor ...
10 NFL Teams With The Most Loyal Fanbases

Most of us grew up watching the NFL in some form, usually because Sunday afternoons meant a game was on in the living room, Thanksgiving included football before dinner, and the playoffs required clearing your schedule so you would not miss kickoff.

Stadium Talk

At some point, you picked a team, and that choice became part of how you experienced every season after that. It might have come from family, geography, or a player you enjoyed watching. In any case, you started following that team, and for certain fanbases, that commitment never weakens.

Green Bay Packers

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The waiting list for season tickets stretches for decades, which says plenty about commitment in Green Bay. The Packers operate as the NFL's only community-owned club, and that has created a rare bond between the organization and residents. Fans shovel seats before kickoff and celebrate touchdowns with the Lambeau Leap.

Philadelphia Eagles

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Intensity defines the atmosphere at Lincoln Financial Field, as Eagles supporters respond loudly to every series and do not hide their frustration when standards slip. The team secured its first Super Bowl title in 2018, and the parade drew massive crowds across Philadelphia. "Fly, Eagles, Fly" echoes after touchdowns and reinforces a shared identity.

Buffalo Bills

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Even though the Bills lost four straight Super Bowls in the early 1990s, their fans never pulled back. The franchise then endured a 17-season playoff drought, but attendance in western New York remained consistent. Highmark Stadium still fills during freezing lake-effect snowstorms, and tailgates begin hours before the opening whistle, regardless of the standings.

Pittsburgh Steelers

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

In 1975, Steelers broadcaster Myron Cope introduced the Terrible Towel, a bright yellow rally towel that fans wave during big moments to energize the team and the stadium. Decades later, thousands of towels still spin in unison at Acrisure Stadium, and that ritual has continued through coaching changes, roster turnover, and different competitive eras, which shows how seriously Pittsburgh takes its traditions.

Dallas Cowboys

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

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National reach separates this club from most others in the league. Cowboys fans fill stadiums across the country, and many road games feature visible sections of navy and silver. That traveling support mostly reduces the usual home-field advantage for opposing teams.

Seattle Seahawks

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

After the NBA's SuperSonics left Seattle, many residents concentrated their sports loyalty on the Seahawks. Fans refer to themselves as the "12s," which signals their role as active participants in games. Lumen Field, the Seahawks' home stadium, developed a reputation as one of the loudest venues in the league, and visiting offenses frequently struggle with communication there.

Chicago Bears

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

There aren't many programs that carry as much early league history as the Bears, who began play in 1919. Matchups continue to be packed, despite extended struggles at quarterback in recent decades. Generational commitment keeps interest steady across eras, and Bears fans rarely abandon the team during seasons that fall short of playoff contention.

Cleveland Browns

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

When ownership moved this club to Baltimore in the mid-1990s, Cleveland fans protested and demanded that the team's history remain tied to their city. The Browns reentered the league in 1999 as an expansion franchise and retained their past records and identity. The fight strengthened the bond between the team and the community.

Minnesota Vikings

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

If you ever visit U.S. Bank Stadium during a Vikings home game, you will see how organized and unified the support can be. Before game time, the crowd joins together for the "Skol" chant to create a coordinated rhythm that fills the entire building, and even the cold Midwest winters fail to dampen that energy.

San Francisco 49ers

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Five Super Bowl titles established a powerful national reputation for the San Francisco 49ers. The franchise moved through multiple roster eras, but attendance has never wavered. Historic figures such as Joe Montana helped shape long-term loyalty, and modern contenders keep interest high.

10 NFL Teams With The Most Loyal Fanbases

Most of us grew up watching the NFL in some form, usually because Sunday afternoons meant a game was on in the living roo...
The Pro Football Hall of Fame honors 3 assistant coaches with the award of excellence

CANTON, Ohio (AP) — Influential special teams coach Mike Westhoff, former San Francisco 49ers offensive line coach Bobb McKittrick and longtime defensive coach Ted Cottrell will be honored with the Pro Football Hall of Fame's Awards of Excellence for the 2026 class.

Associated Press FILE - Denver Broncos special teams coach Mike Westhoff during an NFL football game against the Houston Texans Dec. 3, 2023, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File) FILE - San Francisco 49ers quarterback Joe Montana (16) and offensive line coach Bobb McKittrick look over the workout drills at the 49ers training camp at Redwood City in California, Friday, Jan. 4, 1985. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File) FILE - San Diego Chargers defensive coordinator Ted Cottrell looks on before an NFL divisional playoff football game against the Indianapolis Colts, Sunday, Jan. 13, 2008, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)

Hall of Fame Assistants Football

The Hall announced on Monday that the three assistants were picked as part of the fifth class for the Awards of Excellence who will be honored later this year.

Westhoff spent 33 seasons in the NFL, spending the majority of his career in charge of special teams with the Miami Dolphins and New York Jets.

McKittrick was the offensive line coach for 21 seasons with the 49ers, and was one of four coaches involved with all five of the franchise's five Super Bowl titles. Bill Walsh brought McKittrick to San Francisco in 1979 and he played a key role in establishing a dynasty.

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Cottrell worked for six franchises over 24 seasons and is viewed as an innovator of the 3-4 defense. He helped develop several Hall of Famers, including Bruce Smith in Buffalo.

The Hall previously announced winners in three other categories with Scott Berchtold, Jim Gallagher and Lee Remmel picked as public relations directors; Red Batty, Mike Davidson and Jack Noel as equipment managers; and Edward "Abe" Abramoski, Kent Falb and Michael Ryan in the athletic trainers category.

The Hall will still announce the winners in film and video directors category for the ceremony in June.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/NFL

The Pro Football Hall of Fame honors 3 assistant coaches with the award of excellence

CANTON, Ohio (AP) — Influential special teams coach Mike Westhoff, former San Francisco 49ers offensive line coach Bobb M...
Houston, Illinois carry strong opening-weekend efficiency in March Madness into Sweet 16 collision

Houston coach Kelvin Sampson wanted his Cougars simply to stick to what they do best in defending with their typical toughness to openMarch Madness. Illinois coach Brad Underwood hoped his team would "just let it rip."

Associated Press Illinois guard Kylan Boswell (4) and Illinois guard Keaton Wagler (23) celebrate a win against VCU during the second half in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 21, 2026, in Greenville, S.C. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson) Texas A&M guard Marcus Hill (0) tries to get to a rebound before Houston guards Kingston Flemings (4) and forward Emanuel Sharp (21) during the first half in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Saturday, March 21, 2026, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Kyle Phillips)

NCAA VCU Illinois Basketball

They got what they wanted in the opening weekend of theNCAA Tournamentwhile posting the two most lopsided scoring margins of any teams to advance tothe Sweet 16.Now they will try those very different approaches against one another in a Thursday clash in Houston.

The second-seeded Cougars — who played in last year's national-title game — rolled to 31-point wins against bothIdahoandTexas A&M. That came while allowing just 0.839 points per possession (104 points on 124 possessions).

"Everybody's got a style," coach Kelvin Sampson said after the 88-57 win against the Aggies. "We have a style. Texas A&M has a style, but it doesn't come down to what you are doing vs. them. It's how you do what you do."

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Houston allowed the Vandals and Aggies to score on just 37.1% of their possessions, with those teams shooting a combined 31.5% while making 12 of 54 3-pointers (22.2%).

The third-seeded Illini had the second-largest scoring margin (plus-56) of the first weekend while averaging 1.382 points per possession (181 points on 131 possessions). Illinois scored on 60.3% of its possessions againstPennandVCU.

"We're 34 or 35 games in, whatever we're in, and there's not a lot we don't know," Underwood said. "I'm really glad to see us — I used the term before the tournament — 'just let it rip.' We've got to play that way, and we've got to play loose and we've got to play free."

Things figure to be tighter against the stingy Cougars and which team is the most successful doing what it does best will likely advance. Houston is a 3.5-point favorite, according to BetMGM Sportsbook.

Shooting the 3

Purdue is shooting the 3-pointer better than anyone heading tothe regional roundso far, whileAlabama continues firing from long rangeat a frenetic pace under Nate Oats.The Boilermakers made 22 of 38 3-pointers in wins againstQueensandMiami, good for 57.9% to lead all tournament teams. They were the only tournament team to make more than half their attempts while playing multiple games.In all, six Sweet 16 teams shot at least 40% from 3-point range in the tournament's opening weekend, including Michigan (46.8%, 22 of 47) and Michigan State (45.7%, 21 of 46).The Crimson Tide, meanwhile, leads all tournament teams with 31 made 3s through two rounds, at least five more than any other team. And Alabama's 78 attempted 3s were tied with 12-seed High Point — which upset Wisconsin before falling in a shootout to Arkansas — for the most in the tournament, at least eight more than any other team.Winning profiles and tiersGoing back to the 2001 tournament, 55 of 96 teams to reach the Final Four (57.3%) were ranked inside the top 25 in both adjusted offensive and defensive efficiency for KenPom entering March Madness, with 21 of those ranking in the top 10 at both ends.Slightly more than half of the remaining teams (21) ranked inside the top 10 at one end of the court to offset a ranking outside the top 25 in the other.That leaves 20 outliers that reached the sport's final weekend without holding top-10 status in at least one category.Looking at the three tiers of the 16 teams that will play this week:— Six favorites entered the tournament with top-25 rankings at both ends of the floor: 1-seeds Duke, Arizona and Michigan; and 2-seeds Houston, Iowa State and Michigan State. Of that group, the Blue Devils and Wildcats were top-5 in both categories.— Five teams ranked in the top 10 at one end of the court: 2-seed Purdue; 3-seed Illinois; and 4-seeds Alabama, Arkansas and Nebraska. The Huskers were the only one of that quintet to rank in the top 10 defensively.— The five outliers: 2-seed UConn, 5-seed St. John's, 6-seed Tennessee; 9-seed Iowa and 11-seed Texas. The Huskies are the surprise addition in this group after flirting with earning a No. 1 seed coming down the stretch, but they entered March Madness ranked 30th in offense (122.0 points per 100 possessions) and 11th in defense (94.1).___AP March Madness bracket:https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracketand coverage:https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Purdue is shooting the 3-pointer better than anyone heading tothe regional roundso far, whileAlabama continues firing from long rangeat a frenetic pace under Nate Oats.

The Boilermakers made 22 of 38 3-pointers in wins againstQueensandMiami, good for 57.9% to lead all tournament teams. They were the only tournament team to make more than half their attempts while playing multiple games.

In all, six Sweet 16 teams shot at least 40% from 3-point range in the tournament's opening weekend, including Michigan (46.8%, 22 of 47) and Michigan State (45.7%, 21 of 46).

The Crimson Tide, meanwhile, leads all tournament teams with 31 made 3s through two rounds, at least five more than any other team. And Alabama's 78 attempted 3s were tied with 12-seed High Point — which upset Wisconsin before falling in a shootout to Arkansas — for the most in the tournament, at least eight more than any other team.

Winning profiles and tiers

Going back to the 2001 tournament, 55 of 96 teams to reach the Final Four (57.3%) were ranked inside the top 25 in both adjusted offensive and defensive efficiency for KenPom entering March Madness, with 21 of those ranking in the top 10 at both ends.

Slightly more than half of the remaining teams (21) ranked inside the top 10 at one end of the court to offset a ranking outside the top 25 in the other.

That leaves 20 outliers that reached the sport's final weekend without holding top-10 status in at least one category.

Looking at the three tiers of the 16 teams that will play this week:

— Six favorites entered the tournament with top-25 rankings at both ends of the floor: 1-seeds Duke, Arizona and Michigan; and 2-seeds Houston, Iowa State and Michigan State. Of that group, the Blue Devils and Wildcats were top-5 in both categories.

— Five teams ranked in the top 10 at one end of the court: 2-seed Purdue; 3-seed Illinois; and 4-seeds Alabama, Arkansas and Nebraska. The Huskers were the only one of that quintet to rank in the top 10 defensively.

— The five outliers: 2-seed UConn, 5-seed St. John's, 6-seed Tennessee; 9-seed Iowa and 11-seed Texas. The Huskies are the surprise addition in this group after flirting with earning a No. 1 seed coming down the stretch, but they entered March Madness ranked 30th in offense (122.0 points per 100 possessions) and 11th in defense (94.1).

AP March Madness bracket:https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracketand coverage:https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Houston, Illinois carry strong opening-weekend efficiency in March Madness into Sweet 16 collision

Houston coach Kelvin Sampson wanted his Cougars simply to stick to what they do best in defending with their typical toug...
LaGuardia crash underscores pressures on already strained air traffic control workforce

Just before an Air Canadajet collided with an airport fire truck, air traffic controllers at New York's LaGuardia Airport were juggling a developing late night emergency on the runway.

Associated Press Firefighters and investigators examine the site, Monday, March 23, 2026, where an Air Canada jet came to rest after colliding with a Port Authority firetruck at LaGuardia Airport, after landing Sunday night in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) An Air Canada jet and Port Authority fire truck sit on the runway at LaGuardia Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, after colliding with each other after the jet landed Sunday night in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy speaks during a news conference at LaGuardia Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, after an Air Canada jet collided the night before with a Port Authority firetruck shortly after landing in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) Officials investigate the site, Monday, March 23, 2026, where an Air Canada jet came to rest after colliding with a Port Authority firetruck at LaGuardia Airport, shortly after landing Sunday night in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

LaGuardia Crash

A United Airlines flight had twice aborted takeoff and reported an odor coming from the back of the plane. But with no gate immediately available, the pilot and controllers went back and forth over the radio as controllers tried to reach the airline and find a safe spot to put the plane.Audio recordingscaptured the chaotic conversation as the cockpit conveyed growing urgency.

"Flight attendants in the back are feeling ill because of the odor," the pilot can be heard saying. "We will need to go into any available gate at this time."

With no place to park the aircraft, air traffic control dispatched fire trucks to go to the plane instead and offered stairs to evacuate passengers, all while continuing to manage other traffic. Then a frantic warning cut across the radio: "Stop, stop, stop, Truck 1. Stop, stop, stop."

Moments later, the Air Canada flight landed and crashed into one of the fire trucks as it crossed the runway toward the United aircraft. The pilot and co-pilot of theregional jet flying from Montrealwere killed.

A system under stress

The collisionlate Sunday is putting a renewed focus on the pressures facing air traffic controllers in the United States, a workforce that has long grappled with staffing shortages, demanding schedules, outdated equipment and the lingering effects of government shutdowns.

About 40 passengers and crew members on the Air Canada jet and the two people in the fire truck were taken to hospitals, some with serious injuries. Most were released by Monday morning, authorities said.

While investigators work to determine what led to the runway crash, aviation experts say the incident highlights the demanding environment controllers navigate every day — managing planes landing and taking off, aircraft moving between gates and runways, and service vehicles ranging from emergency responders to maintenance trucks.

"In the best of times, air traffic controls and air traffic controllers are under a great deal of stress," said Alan Diehl, a former federal crash investigator. "These are people with very high cognitive levels. They're carefully selected, extensively trained. And one of the problems is there is a shortage of 3,000 of them in this country right now."

At a news conference Monday, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, whose department oversees the Federal Aviation Administration, declined to say how many controllers were on duty at LaGuardia when the Canadian plane and the fire truck carrying Port Authority of New York and New Jersey police officers crossed paths. But he described the airport's tower as generally "well staffed" and just short of its target of 37 controllers. He said the airport currently has 33 controllers assigned to it, and seven more who are in training.

Duffy was confirmed as President Donald Trump's transportation secretary the day before an Army helicopter and a passenger plane collided over the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, killing 67 people. Since taking office, he has pledged to improve air controller staffing and to upgrade traffic control equipment.

A longstanding problem

The FAA has been chronically understaffed for years. Air traffic controllers routinely work overtime and six-day work weeks, while dealing with outdated equipment.

Former FAA air traffic control chief Mike McCormick said that while LaGuardia is "not a control tower that has perennial staffing problems," the overnight shift — when the crash occurred — would typically be staffed more lightly. Investigators were expected to examine how much overtime local controllers were working and how many consecutive days they had been on duty to determine whether fatigue could have played a role.

Those questions are standard after crashes. John Cox, CEO of aviation consulting firm Safety Operating Systems, said National Transportation Safety Board investigators would closely examine the human factors surrounding the tower's operations.

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"The staffing issue and the controller's work schedule will certainly be something that they look at and only then can we determine if it's a staffing or fatigue issue," Cox said.

In a statement Monday, the National Air Traffic Controllers Association emphasized the weight of the job.

"Air traffic controllers work every day to keep passengers and cargo moving safely and efficiently," the statement said. "We serve quietly, but moments like this remind us of the responsibility we carry — and how deeply it stays with us when tragedy occurs."

Roughly 20 minutes after the crash, a controller appears to blame himself.

"We were dealing with an emergency," he said, "and I messed up."

Modernizing the FAA

The strain on the workforcehas been building for years. During a record U.S. government shutdown last fall that lasted 43 days, and a 35-day shutdown that spanned December 2018 and January 2019, controllers were required to continue working without pay, pushing some to quit or retire early. At the same time, training and hiring for new recruits was halted or slowed.

Because certification can take years, experts, union leaders and agency officials have warned that the effects would linger long after funding resumed, compounding attrition and making recruitment more difficult. Shutdowns also diminish morale, Diehl said.

Since becoming

Still, industry officials emphasize that moves to modernize the technology and equipment air traffic controllers use underway. Chris Sununu, CEO of airline trade group Airlines for America, said Congress has invested billions of dollars to upgrade aging technology and improve the system.

"I think the air traffic control system has been under a lot of strain for 30 years," Sununu said. "And that's why Congress has put billions of dollars behind rebuilding the entire system. And we've already seen some pretty good successes."

He pointed to the transition away from paper flight progress strips to digital tools at many airports, along with the purchase of hundreds of new radar systems nationwide. A new traffic flow system with upgraded back-end technology is expected to roll out later this year, he said.

"By and large, the air traffic controllers work really, really well with a very antiquated system and every day that goes by the system is now getting upgraded," Sununu said.

Associated Press reporters Mae Anderson in New York and Holly Ramer in Concord, New Hampshire, contributed to this report.

LaGuardia crash underscores pressures on already strained air traffic control workforce

Just before an Air Canadajet collided with an airport fire truck, air traffic controllers at New York's LaGuardia Air...

 

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