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American Airlines E175 Comes Within 350 Feet Of Air Canada Jet In JFK Near Miss

American Airlines E175 Comes Within 350 Feet Of Air Canada Jet In JFK Near Miss



American Airlines E175 Comes Within 350 Feet Of Air Canada Jet In JFK Near Miss


American Airlines E175 came within 350 feet of an Air Canada jet in a near miss at JFK Airport, raising fresh concerns about aviation safety and air traffic control procedures.


US federal authorities are investigating a very serious close call at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) after an American Airlines Embraer E175 and an Air Canada Jazz E175 came within roughly 350 feet (106 meters) of each other while approaching parallel runways. Preliminary reports indicate that the American-operated regional jet strayed from its intended approach path, triggering onboard collision warnings and go-arounds for both crews before each aircraft managed to land safely.


The incident in question, which occurred Monday afternoon, has renewed scrutiny of air safety around JFK and will likely raise questions about runway separation, controller oversight, and cockpit response in one of the nation's busiest airport environments as the FAA investigates. These kinds of situations are becoming all too common.


The near-miss in question took place at around 2:30 PM local time in New York City, when Republic Airways Flight 4464, operating for American Airlines from Indianapolis International Airport (IND), was on final approach to JFK's runway 31L. At the same time, Jazz Aviation Flight 554, operating for Air Canada from Toronto, was approaching parallel runway 31R. Controllers then warned that the American crew was cutting through the 31L approach course and instructed the Air Canada flight to climb to 3,000 feet (914 meters) because traffic to its left was overshooting the parallel approach.


Aircraft anti-collision alarms sounded in both cockpits, and both crews responded to resolution advisories from air traffic control. Both jets immediately initiated go-arounds, as is routine and expected. At their closest point, they were separated by only around 350 feet vertically (107 meters). They were only around 0.62 miles (1 km) apart horizontally. Both aircraft reportedly landed safely as a result.


This accident is ultimately extremely concerning because this was not some kind of routine spacing challenge. Rather, it was a failure that directly pushed two passenger aircraft into conflicting airspace during parallel approaches at JFK, one of the nation's largest, busiest, and most complex airports.


Preliminary Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) information says that the Republic-operated American Airlines flight missed its intended approach path and flew too close to the Jazz-operated Air Canada flight. The minuscule amount of recorded separation between the two aircraft at the time of the aborted landings is the most concerning part of this story, as it highlights just how close this situation came to becoming a much more serious safety issue.


This is alarming for anyone who travels because those warnings are meant to be a last line of defense, not just an ordinary part of arrival operations. It is also troubling in a much broader sense. JFK has already faced major scrutiny over prior close calls, and New York-area aviation safety remains under even sharper focus following the March 2026 Air Canada Express crash at LaGuardia Airport (LGA).


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