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Charlotte Airport Officials May Have Thought Wednesday Was Jinxed

Bees Swarm Airliner Tug, Moving Walkway Motor Caught Fire

Wednesday was not the best of days for managers at North Carolina's Charlotte-Douglas International Airport.

A US Airways flight was delayed for about three hours at a gate when a swarm of bees described as about the size of a soccer ball surrounded the tug that was assigned to push the airplane back from the terminal. The Charlotte Observer reports that airport managers went scrambling to find a beekeeper.

There were passengers already on board the airliner when the swarm, which the beekeeper said was a queen bee and drones looking to establish a new colony, went after the tug. Beekeeper Jimmy Odom said they were docile, and just looking for a place to call home. But the flight had already been delayed half an hour by mechanical difficulties, and was getting close to the three-hour tarmac delay limit.

The plane finally departed at 4:00 p.m. EDT ... short of the three-hour delay which would have forced US Airways to deplane the passengers or pay a fine.

Then about 5:00 p.m., a fire broke out in one of the electric motors of a moving walkway on Concourse E, which forced the evacuation of the area. The Concourse was re-opened about 8:00 p.m., and officials said the fire was contained to the motor.

And even getting out of Charlotte did not mean passengers’ problems were over. A US Airways flight from Charlotte to Rome wound up in Philadelphia instead. E-mails received by the Charlotte Observer from passengers indicated that the plane had developed a mechanical problem in-flight over the Atlantic Ocean and returned to the Pennsylvania airport where it landed safely.

FMI: www.charlotteairport.com

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