emergencies and disasters

Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau will leave the company later this year, after coming under fire last week for his inability to deliver a video condolence message in French following a plane crash that killed two Air Canada Express pilots.

The airline said Monday that Rousseau has told the board he'll retire by the end of third quarter of this year. He's expected to continue to lead the company and serve on its board of directors until he steps down.

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The chief executive of Air Canada is apologizing for not being able to express himself adequately in French after releasing a video message of condolence on the deadly plane crash in New York on Sunday.

Michael Rousseau has been criticized for the four-minute video posted online that only included two French words — "bonjour" and "merci."

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As experts assess the aftermath of the Air Canada Express plane crash at LaGuardia Airport, some have expressed surprise it wasn't worse — despite the tragedy of a disaster that left two pilots dead.

Commercial aircraft are constructed for flight, not for withstanding head-on collisions with fire trucks that can weigh between 25 and 50 tonnes, said Benoit Gauthier, a retired pilot who flew with Air Canada for 37 years.

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Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau was slammed by Prime Minister Mark Carney and Quebec's government on Wednesday for delivering an English-only message of condolence after Sunday's deadly plane crash in New York.

Rousseau is being summoned to testify at the House of Commons official languages committee after he shared a four-minute condolence video online that only included two French words — "bonjour" and "merci."

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United States officials say a runway warning system didn't sound an alarm before an Air Canada jet from Montreal and a fire truck collided at New York's LaGuardia Airport.

The head of the National Transportation Safety Board, Jennifer Homendy, said Tuesday that the system didn't work as intended because the fire truck did not have a transponder.

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Clément Lelièvre says the pilots of the Air Canada jet that collided with a fire truck on a runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport likely saved his life and the lives of other passengers late Sunday night.

The pilot and co-pilot of Flight AC8646 were killed in the collision, which sent 41 people to hospital and injured others, like Lelièvre, who were treated at the scene.

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An Air Canada jet carrying 76 people touched down and slammed into a fire truck on a runway at New York's LaGuardia Airport late Sunday night, killing its two pilots and injuring many more.

Kathryn Garcia, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs the airport, said all who were on the plane — 72 passengers and four crew — have been accounted for.

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