'Angels' and training help former fighter
pilot save Southwest flight
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[April 18, 2018]
By Andrew Hay
(Reuters) - The pilot who safely landed a
stricken Southwest Airlines flight on Tuesday got her first flying
experience in the U.S. Navy, touching down F-18 fighter jets at 150
miles per hour on aircraft carriers.
Tammie Jo Shults, 56, may have drawn on her Navy skills when one of the
two engines on her Boeing 737-700 blew and broke apart at 32,000 feet on
Tuesday, forcing her to implement a rapid descent toward Philadelphia
International Airport.
The explosion killed one passenger and nearly sucked another out of a
shattered window.
One of the first female fighter pilots in the U.S. Navy, Shults calmly
told air traffic control that part of her plane was missing, and she
would need ambulances on the runway.
"So we have a part of the aircraft missing so we're going to need to
slow down a bit," Shults told a controller.
Many of the 144 passengers sang her praise on social media after Shults
thanked them for their bravery as they left the plane.
"The pilot Tammy Jo was so amazing! She landed us safely in Philly,"
said Amanda Bourman on Instagram.
Passengers identified Shults as the pilot. Southwest Airlines declined
to name the crew of flight 1380 and Shults was not immediately available
for comment.
Authorities said the crew did what they were trained to do.
"They're in the simulator and practice emergency descents..and losing an
engine... They did the job that professional airline pilots are trained
to do," National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Robert Sumwalt
told reporters.
"GOD SENT HIS ANGELS"
Shults might never have become a pilot if she had not been so determined
to fly from a young age.
She is quoted on fighter plane blog F-16.net saying she tried to attend
an aviation career day at high school but was told they did not accept
girls.
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Emergency personnel monitor the damaged engine of Southwest Airlines
Flight 1380, which diverted to the Philadelphia International
Airport this morning after the airline crew reported damage to one
of the aircraft's engines, on a runway in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
U.S. April 17, 2018. REUTERS/Mark Makela
A native of New Mexico, she never lost the urge to fly and, after
studying medicine in Kansas, applied to the Air Force. It would not
let her take the test to become a pilot, but the U.S. Navy did.
She was one of the first female F-18 pilots and became an instructor
before she left the Navy in 1993 and joined Southwest, according to
the blog.
A Christian, who is married to a fellow pilot and has two children,
Shults said that sitting in the captain's chair gave her "the
opportunity to witness for Christ on almost every flight."
Bourman was among passengers who said they had been saved by divine
intervention.
"God sent his angels to watch over us," she said.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; additional reporting
by Bill Tarrant in Los Angeles; Editing by Neil Fullick)
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