-
Oregon transportation officials are expecting long lines as the deadline approaches in May 2025.
-
The Rogue Valley International 鈥 Medford Airport is currently much smaller than it should be according to airport officials. The airport is planning a major expansion to accommodate growing demand.
-
Alaska Airlines is canceling through Saturday all flights on Boeing 737 Max 9 planes like the one that suffered an in-flight blowout of a fuselage panel last week as it waits for new instructions from Boeing and federal officials on how to inspect the fleet.
-
The piece of the plane鈥檚 fuselage landed in Bob Sauer鈥檚 yard, not far from his house. 鈥淪o I鈥檓 really glad it landed where it did.鈥
-
More than 140 Max 9 planes operated by both airlines are stuck on the ground after an aircraft of the same type blew out midair over Portland, Oregon, Friday evening.
-
The National Transportation Safety Board, which is set to start investigation on the incident Sunday, says radar data shows the fallen piece of the aircraft is now located in Portland鈥檚 Cedar Hills neighborhood.
-
Alaska Airlines grounded all of its Boeing 737-9 aircraft, hours after a window on one such plane blew out midair and forced an emergency landing in Oregon. The airline said the plane landed safely.
-
More than 1,400 flights canceled worldwide Monday, adding to thousands canceled over the Christmas weekend. And across the country, long lines continued at COVID-19 testing sites.
-
Several airlines are reporting staff shortages from the spread of the coronavirus, leaving passengers with delayed or canceled flights. Bad weather also affected some flights.
-
In a preemptive move, United, Delta and others canceled dozens of flights scheduled for Friday. They say the omicron spike has left them with staffing shortages.
-
Starting Monday, the U.S. begins accepting fully vaccinated travelers at airports and land borders, doing away with a COVID-19 restriction that dates back to the Trump administration.
-
Flying passengers into small cities can be a tricky business. Not the flying part; the keeping the airline in business part. Two airports in our region鈥
-
That was fast. Alaska-based Peninsula Air, "Pen Air", began flying to several airports in our region just last year. Now Pen Air has filed for bankruptcy鈥
-
Anybody who's ever flown has an airline or airport horror story.But this much can be said: planes seldom collide in the skies. The federal air traffic鈥