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A 9-year-old was found safe after jumping onto an airport baggage conveyor belt in Minneapolis

A 9-year-old was found safe after jumping onto an airport baggage conveyor belt in Minneapolis INSIDER 4/05/2021 mhumphries@businessinsider.com (Monica Humphries) © Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images A 2010 photo shows a suitcase in the baggage organization system at Heathrow Airport in London (not the airport mentioned in the story). Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images A 9-year-old rode a luggage conveyor belt Saturday at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The belt was stopped, but he crawled onto another one. Within four minutes, he was found uninjured. Delta Air Lines and the airport are reviewing the event for safety and security purposes. A 9-year-old boy was found uninjured on Saturday shortly after venturing into a prohibited luggage conveyor belt at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.

Flight Attendant Files Lawsuit Against Southwest Airlines After Husband Dies From COVID-19

Updated on April 29, 2021 at 9:38 am NBCUniversal, Inc. A Southwest Airlines flight attendant is suing the Dallas-based airline company in a wrongful death lawsuit alleging she caught COVID-19 at a mandatory training and transmitted the virus to her husband, who died from it a month later. Carol Madden, 69, lives in Pennsylvania and is based out of Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport. On July 13, 2020, she attended a mandatory training for flight attendants according to her attorney Dan Mastromarco. Download our NBC DFW mobile app for Apple or Android to get alerts for local breaking news and weather. There s a lot of intimate handling of various materials that flight attendants have to use, of course, they re training them for safety precautions during flights, said Mastromarco. They have to handle placards, they have hooded face masks from time to time, they have to handle door handles, they have to shout, sometimes scream, various safety measure

Flight Attendant Sues Southwest Airlines After Husband Dies From COVID-19

Updated on April 29, 2021 at 10:39 am NBCUniversal, Inc. A Southwest Airlines flight attendant is suing the Dallas-based airline company in a wrongful death lawsuit alleging she caught COVID-19 at a mandatory training and transmitted the virus to her husband, who died from it a month later. Carol Madden, 69, lives in Pennsylvania and is based out of Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport. On July 13, 2020, she attended a mandatory training for flight attendants according to her attorney Dan Mastromarco. Download our mobile app for iOS or Android to get alerts for local breaking news and weather. There s a lot of intimate handling of various materials that flight attendants have to use, of course, they re training them for safety precautions during flights, said Mastromarco. They have to handle placards, they have hooded face masks from time to time, they have to handle door handles, they have to shout, sometimes scream, various safety measures, they

Flight attendant sues Southwest Airlines over husband s COVID-19 death

Flight attendant sues Southwest Airlines over husband’s COVID-19 death The 69-year-old flight attendant alleges she got the virus after attending a training meeting in July 2020. She recovered, but her husband died nearly a month later. A man looks out over a Southwest Airlines 737 parked at a gate at Houston Hobby Airport.(Smiley N. Pool / Staff Photographer) A Southwest Airlines flight attendant is suing the airline after her husband died of COVID-19 following a training session in which she says she caught the virus. Carol Madden, 69, said her airline “utterly failed to implement the most basic precautions to safeguard the health and wellbeing” during a mandatory training session last July at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport. She’s asking for $3 million in damages.

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