The NTSB has issued its final report on the fatal collision between a CRJ-900 regional jet and an airport fire truck at LaGuardia. The findings are blunt: the truck driver missed multiple direct warnings — visual, audible, and procedural — and crossed an active runway while a regional jet was landing on it. One person died. The aircraft was destroyed.
It is the kind of accident that aviation safety culture is supposed to prevent. The NTSB found that, in this case, every layer of defence failed simultaneously.
Quick Facts
Date of accident: 2024
Location: LaGuardia Airport (KLGA), Queens, New York
Aircraft: Canadair CRJ-900, regional carrier operating for a U.S. major
Other vehicle: Port Authority airport fire truck (CFR-3)
Fatalities: 1 (fire truck occupant)
NTSB final cause: Driver failed to observe runway-active warnings
Contributing factors: Inadequate ARFF training, weak procedural compliance
Date of final report: May 2026
A Cascade of Warnings, All Missed
The NTSB’s reconstruction identifies four separate warning mechanisms that the driver crossed without acknowledgement. The runway hold-short line was visibly painted and lit. The airport’s runway status lights (RWSL) at the position were illuminated red — a system specifically engineered for exactly this scenario. The ground-control tower transmitted explicit hold-short instructions over the standard ground frequency. And the fire truck’s onboard moving-map display showed the runway as active.
None of these signals were responded to. The truck rolled across the runway as the CRJ-900 touched down. The collision was lethal for the truck occupant and destroyed the aircraft.
Training, Not Hardware
The NTSB explicitly notes that no hardware failure was identified. The runway status lights worked. The radios worked. The painted markings were correct. The failure was procedural and human — the airport rescue and firefighting (ARFF) crew had not been trained to defer to RWSL indications when their own dispatch instructions appeared to conflict with the visual signals.
The recommendations call for nationwide retraining of ARFF crews on RWSL precedence and stricter integration of fire-vehicle moving-map displays with ground-control intent.
Why It Matters
Runway incursions remain the FAA’s top operational safety concern. The LaGuardia accident is the deadliest U.S. example involving an airport-operations vehicle in over two decades. The NTSB’s recommendations, if adopted, will reshape how every Class B airport in the country trains and equips its ARFF crews.
The lesson of LaGuardia is uncomfortable but simple: the warnings worked. The driver didn’t.
Sources: NTSB final accident report, FLYING Magazine, FAA Air Traffic Bulletin.




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