An Alaska Airlines' Boeing 737-900ER landing at LAX - Photo: Carlos Ever | Flickr CC

An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-900ER landing at LAX – Photo: Carlos Ever | Flickr CC

On Monday, an Alaska Airlines flight from Newark bound for Seattle had to divert to Buffalo for an emergency landing because of smoke reported in the passenger cabin.

According to a statement from the airline, a malfunctioning credit card reader on board Flight 17, operated by a Boeing 737-900ER, started producing the smoke. A flight attendant took it to the back galley, placed the the device into a trash bin to contain it, and used a fire extinguisher to suppress any possible fire, while the flight crew declared an emergency and prepared to divert. There were no flames from the device, and the plane landed without incident at 8:15am EDT with 181 passengers and six crew members on board.

No injuries or fire damage to the aircraft were reported, though fire and emergency vehicles met the aircraft on the runway as a precaution, due to landing overweight from to a full cabin and fuel tanks for the transcontinental flight. A passenger on board the flight posted details of the diversion as it was happening on Flyertalk, an online forum for the frequent flyer community. User “autumnmist” reported that the “[f]light attendants and pilot handled it well,” and also lamented, “[s]o much for getting a solid nap in before landing in Seattle!”

We reached out to autumnmist, who asked to be identified as “J,” for more information. J, seated in Row 13, stated that the passengers were calm, mostly dozing because of the early hour and some not realizing that anything had happened until the descent started. The cabin crew announced that all passengers should be seated and prepared for landing. The captain came onto the PA system to announce that there was a small incident and that they would be landing at Buffalo out of an abundance of caution, touching down in about 17-18 minutes.

 

Alaska Airlines first Boeing 737-900ER (N402AS) is seen at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Image from Alaska Airlines.

Alaska Airlines’, first Boeing 737-900ER – Photo: Alaska Airlines

After landing, the plane was met on the runway by firefighters who inspected the galley and deemed the plane cleared to continue under its own power to the gate with passengers on board. However, the plane had to wait for approximately one hour for a gate to open up, as this was an unscheduled arrival.

At the gate, passengers were unloaded five rows at a time, to minimize the risk that the plane would tip under extra weight of fuel. Once in the terminal, the passengers were asked to give the crew an hour to inspect the aircraft and determine a solution.

Because the original aircraft no longer had the required minimum number of extinguishers on board and required an inspection due to the overweight landing, a replacement plane was dispatched from Seattle to pick up any remaining passengers who chose to wait for the rescue flight back to Seattle. The replacement plane was supposed to have arrived around 4:30pm ET with two more ground agents (armed with laptops), two sets of flight crew, and a deadheading cabin crew to work the return flight.

Alaska does not serve Buffalo, so some passengers were being rebooked onto other airlines to their final destinations. J praised the efforts of the agents contracted to help process the flight, given their limited resources at Buffalo, saying that the only real issue was lack of free WiFi at the airport.

J chose to wait for the rescue flight inside the American Airlines lounge at the Buffalo airport. Others waited in the gate area; pizza was brought in to help feed the passengers while the rescue plane was en route. Around mid-afternoon, he reported that he received an email from Alaska, apologizing for the delay and telling the passengers to expect a follow-up email with a $500 credit for future Alaska Airlines travel.

An Alaska Airlines 737 taking off from SNA. Photo: John Nguyen | AirlineReporter

An Alaska Airlines 737 taking off from SNA. Photo: John Nguyen | AirlineReporter

The rescue flight, Flight 9232, finally departed Buffalo at 7:08pm ET and arrived in Seattle 8:52pm PT, approximately eight and a half hours after the originally scheduled arrival time. J reported that all the passengers on board were given free food and drinks, and the email with the $500 voucher was in J’s inbox by the time he landed.

“Prompt and pretty great compensation too since to me, the incident was handled as well as could be expected.” J wrote. “Last time I was on a severely delayed flight ([a Delta flight from Chicago to New York] around Christmas time a few years ago), we were delayed from 9am to like 4pm and got nothing, not even food, and no money either.”

Alaska indicated that the handheld devices were recently introduced, and were being immediately removed from service off all aircraft for inspection.

SENIOR CORRESPONDENT - LOS ANGELES, CA. With LAX serving as a second home, John enjoys being confined to an aluminum (or now carbon composite) cylinder jetting through the air miles above the terra firma. He has logged millions of miles in such conditions and enjoyed it 99% of the time. Email: john@airlinereporter.com. You can also read more about John's non-AVGeek musings on his personal blog, VNAFlyer.

http://VNAFlyer.blogspot.com
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3 Comments
Bob Walters

This is exactly why we will go out of our way to fly Alaska Airlines……the last airline who truly believes in customer service on the ground and in the air…….Thank you Alaska Air

Good article about good service from Alaska….but no need to knock another airline toward the end of the article (Delta). I was on a Delta flight a few months ago where they served pizza in the boarding area just because they said they appreciated our business…..there were no delays, no problems at all!

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