Food Poisoning Diverts Holiday Flight

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Key Takeaways:

  • A TUI Airways Boeing 787 flight from Doncaster to Melbourne, Florida diverted to Bangor, Maine due to the first officer experiencing suspected food poisoning.
  • The diversion was necessary because the flight only had two pilots onboard.
  • Bangor International Airport, due to its history as a Strategic Air Command base, was able to accommodate the aircraft and its 300 passengers.
  • A subsequent TUI flight from Birmingham delivered a replacement crew to allow the original flight to continue to Florida.
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Life imitated art over Maine in mid-October when a first officer on a TUI Airways Boeing 787 was felled by suspected food poisoning. The aircraft, which was on a charter flight from Doncaster in the U.K. to Melbourne, Florida (used by some holiday charters as a cheaper alternative to Orlando), had only two pilots for the 8.5-hour trip so procedures demanded a diversion. The captain, with a flight attendant flying shotgun, headed for Bangor, Maine, with controllers so anxious to help one offered to read the captain the ATIS. He declined, having already dialed it in.

The landing was uneventful, the FO was taken to a local hospital and accommodations were found for 300 surprise visitors in the city of 31,000, which has the runway for a heavy jet thanks to the former Strategic Air Command base on the outskirts of town. TUI operates one flight a day to Melbourne from a different city in the U.K. The folks on the Birmingham flight the next day also made a stop in Bangor to drop off a fresh crew to get the Doncaster flight on its way. 

Russ Niles

Russ Niles is Editor-in-Chief of AVweb. He has been a pilot for 30 years and joined AVweb 22 years ago. He and his wife Marni live in southern British Columbia where they also operate a small winery.
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