The mood at Comair was pretty grim yesterday- with our company president Don Bornhorst calling it the darkest day in Comair's history. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of our passengers and crew involved in the accident.
Thus far it has been confirmed that the aircraft was on the wrong runway- which obviously flags some questions. 1) how did the aircraft manage to get there and begin takeoff roll without either the captain or FO realizing it was the wrong, unlit runway. 2) where was the tower controller at the time and why didn't he realize and notify the crew of the error.
Our president said it best in the news conference yesterday that speculation isn't going to get us anywhere. Watching the news yesterday drove me nuts, because as usual the media has no idea what the hell they're talking about. The news kept showing
this photo from the Comair website, which is clearly a 70 seater (the one that crashed was a 50).
They even had one reporter on CNN say, and I quote, "Crashes like this are sometimes caused by subcontracted, farmed out maintenance. We'll certainly want to know who Comair subcontracts to perform their maintenance." Lady, get your facts right! We don't subcontract maintenance, it's all done by Comair people. LEX is even a Comair maintenance hub.
The saddest part of the whole accident is the reports that the aircraft was basically intact. The crash itself was basically survivable, but the fire wasn't. Our flights to ATL load up with about 9,000 pounds of fuel, and I'd imagine a flight from Lexington would have around 8,000 pounds onboard. We heard that the FO was pulled out of the flight deck window, and the guy that pulled him out of the window received burns also.