Dan Millican reported this on YouTube over the weekend, but I couldn't find any other news about it; looks like he's correct:
https://www.dailywire.com/news/texas-airport-worker-killed-after-being-ingested-into-jet-engine
I don't ever remember hearing about one of these before the one a few months ago, so now two in quick succession is alarming. Is it a return to hectic flying schedules after a long lull? Seems like that would've worked itself out by now. New hires maybe? Overworked employees because they can't find enough warm bodies to do the jobs? Maybe they need to work on automating the ground crew instead of the pilots.
Seems like there's been a lot more runway incursions than usual too... or maybe the media is just reporting on it more. Is commercial aviation stressed to the breaking point?
https://www.dailywire.com/news/texas-airport-worker-killed-after-being-ingested-into-jet-engine
I don't ever remember hearing about one of these before the one a few months ago, so now two in quick succession is alarming. Is it a return to hectic flying schedules after a long lull? Seems like that would've worked itself out by now. New hires maybe? Overworked employees because they can't find enough warm bodies to do the jobs? Maybe they need to work on automating the ground crew instead of the pilots.
Seems like there's been a lot more runway incursions than usual too... or maybe the media is just reporting on it more. Is commercial aviation stressed to the breaking point?