30 Years Ago Today

JEK

Senior Insider
My MIL was schedule to fly on that flight, that week and when I heard of the crash, I called home and casually asked what day her Mom was to fly. The day before.




Air Florida survivors reflect on crash that changed their lives

View Photo Gallery — ?All but four passengers and one flight attendant of the 79 people aboard died in the crash into the 14th Street Bridge over the Potomac River. Here are historic and current photos from the incident.


By Timothy R. Smith, Published: January 12

Thirty years ago, Kelly Duncan was clinging to flotsam in the icy Potomac, thinking about her life.

“I was kind of afraid of God at that point,” she said recently. “I thought he must be really mad at me.”


Duncan was a flight attendant aboard Air Florida Flight 90 when it hit the 14th Street bridge and crashed into the river Jan. 13, 1982. She was the lone crew member to survive. Seventy-eight passengers, motorists and crew members died. Five people aboard the plane survived the day.

For Duncan, the day was a rebirth, she said. At 22, she was, by her own account, a party girl. The weekend before the accident, she and some friends drank their way down the Florida Keys.

She was in the river for 20 minutes. At first, she was angry at the people on the bank, who were staring helplessly at the six people clinging to the tail section.

But then, “I felt like that was the first time I felt God’s presence,” she said.
She returned to Air Florida five months later. The first flight was nerve-racking, but she found solace in religion.

Soon she settled into the old rhythm and took it in stride when a passenger at National Airport asked her whether his ticket was correct and the flight listed was not destined for the 14th Street bridge. That had become a stale joke. By 1984, she had left the airline to study early childhood education.

Duncan now works at Christ Fellowship in Miami, where she ministers to children and oversees stage productions and skits.

“I don’t know how people could go through something like this without faith,” she said.

Joseph Stiley, now 72, also remembers the day as transformative. He thought it had started off badly.

Stiley, then a vice president at General Telephone & Electronics Corp., had grim news to deliver to employees in Huntsville, Ala. The factory there was about to be sold, and GTE would keep only a handful of engineers.

“A lot of people were going to lose their jobs,” Stiley said.

On top of that, he was missing his son’s 12th birthday in Manassas.

He and his assistant, Patricia Felch, were aboard Flight 90 when it crashed. Stiley, who broke more than 60 bones, was the most severely injured of the survivors and, with Felch, the closest survivors to the front of the plane.

“I remember coming out of the airplane. I remember the [rescue] helicopter. .?.?. I remember the ambulance. I remember seeing the lights in the hospital. I remember a lot of other things related to the Air Florida crash, but I don’t know how much of that was because of the coverage.”

Stiley said he often feels odd when he isn’t sure a memory is something he experienced or something he saw on television.

“I get lots of intense dreams, and I can’t separate some of those experiences,” he said.

He does remember the vividness of life after the crash: His divorce. Returning to GTE 18 months later after intense physical therapy.

It was different, though. People stared, and someone had filled his job. He left within two weeks.

He went to work for Comdial in Charlottesville but eventually moved to the West Coast and worked at tech firms until the late 1990s.

Now in semi-retirement, he is building a bed-and-breakfast in Puerto Escondido, Mexico. He spends about two of every six weeks there and considers it his home. He also spends time in Port Ludlow, Wash., and in Ronan, Mont., where he has a hydroponic greenhouse, a hobby of his. Stiley, the father of six, has eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. One of the great-grandchildren recently started kindergarten.

“Two of the biggest changes were I got to the ‘Best Coast,’ and I’m doing work that is fresh and new and exciting for me,” Stiley said.

Another survivor, Priscilla Tirado, moved to Florida and has been reluctant to talk about the crash.

The other two survivors are no longer living. After the crash, Bert Hamilton moved to Florida and became a motivational speaker. Felch, Stiley’s assistant, married and divorced after the crash, moved from Northern Virginia to Florida and back. Hamilton and Felch died in April 2002, 16 days apart.

It was at church that Kelly Duncan met her future husband, John Moore, a professional tennis player in Miami.

They have been married for 28 years. Had the crash not happened, she might not have met him, she said. They had three children together, all now in their 20s. The oldest, a son, recently wed.

“Oh, gosh, I’ve enjoyed my kids,” she said. “I’m waiting for grandkids.”
 

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I do too---even though I was living in Munich when it happened. It was big, awful news. Tom said to me this morning that it was the 30 year mark for this tragedy----and we both just looked at eachother and said "I feel really old" simultaneously!
JEK----that must have been a tough few moments until you knew that your MIL was not on this plane.....
 
Nope---- it was the Greaseman who got fired.....he called the airline and tried to make a flight reservation from DC to the 14thShenendoah st. Bridge.
 
katva said:
Nope---- it was the Greaseman who got fired.....he called the airline and tried to make a flight reservation from DC to the 14thShenendoah st. Bridge.


Stern got fired
 
10. D.C. PLANE CRASH INCIDENT
It was 1982, and Stern was working at radio station DC101 in Washington, D.C.; relatively unknown outside of local radio. On Jan. 13, an Air Florida plane that took off from Washington National Airport crashed into the nearby 14th Street Bridge, killing 74 people. The next day, Stern poked fun at the crash on his show and called Air Florida to ask what the fare was for a one-way ticket from the National Airport to the 14th Street Bridge. The resulting controversy and other incidents led to Stern being fired from the station six months later.
 
The Greaseman

Martin Luther King Day comment
In January 1985, Tracht created an uproar by making an on-air joke about the new federal holiday, Martin Luther King Day saying, "Why don't we plug four more and get the whole week off?" followed by, "Come on, now, you know I don't mean nothin'!" He was suspended from the station for five days, publicly apologized, and donated money to create a scholarship at Howard University in honor of Dr. King.[8] The Washington Post noted that he was the highest paid DJ in D.C. during 1987, making $400,000 a year.[6]
 
JEK said:
10. D.C. PLANE CRASH INCIDENT
It was 1982, and Stern was working at radio station DC101 in Washington, D.C.; relatively unknown outside of local radio. On Jan. 13, an Air Florida plane that took off from Washington National Airport crashed into the nearby 14th Street Bridge, killing 74 people. The next day, Stern poked fun at the crash on his show and called Air Florida to ask what the fare was for a one-way ticket from the National Airport to the 14th Street Bridge. The resulting controversy and other incidents led to Stern being fired from the station six months later.


Thank you. 30 years ago I remember- it's last night I can't recall. LOL
 
I was so proud of the people(person?) who dove into the Potomac in all that ice to rescue the survivors.
 
JEK, there have been several phone calls to my house that have casually asked "Where's Kevin today?" They're generally tied to explosions, crashes, or fire bombs in NYC. I don't go there no more...

Lenny Skutnik I remember.

Howard Stern? Is there any way to remove his channels from my satellite radio?
 
Peter_NJ said:
Good memory Andy.Are you a Stern fan?




Andynap said:
katva said:
Nope---- it was the Greaseman who got fired.....he called the airline and tried to make a flight reservation from DC to the 14thShenendoah st. Bridge.


Stern got fired

No but my then 14 year old son was and thought what he did was hysterical- me not so much.
 
Peter_NJ said:
Good memory Andy.Are you a Stern fan?




Andynap said:
katva said:
Nope---- it was the Greaseman who got fired.....he called the airline and tried to make a flight reservation from DC to the 14thShenendoah st. Bridge.


Stern got fired


I believe Howard's version is that the Air Florida call was just an excuse they piled on when they fired him for something else. I don't recall all the details but I rememeber him "explaining" to a caller that the station made the claim that Air Florida was the reason for the firing just to get a little positive press.

It sort of makes sense....why wait 6 months to fire someone for doing something offensive? You do it very quickly to try to turn some bad press into good press and right a wrong. By the time he was fired, it was a long forgotten comment.

That's Howard's take anyway as much as I remember of it.
 
We lived there then too. Didi was at NIH in Bethesda, six months pregnant with Joanie. I was at Justice, and planned to take the subway to UDC-Van Ness, where the red line ended at that time, and Didi would pick me up (we lived in AU Park). There was also a fatal subway wreck that afternoon, and many of the trains stopped running. No cell phones, of course. Didi was in our VW, which you had to drive to get the heater to work, and all traffic was stalled. We eventually hooked up. We also remember how quiet everything was that day, with the snow and all of the city at a standstill.
 
A day of indelible tragedy, remembered
By Washington Post Editors
Thirty years ago, three Metro passengers were killed and 25 injured in the first fatal accident in the history of the subway.

Jan. 13, 1982 was a chaotic and tragic day in Washington. A heavy snowstorm had enveloped the area, and trains and roads were jammed with workers headed home early. Metro, which had opened in 1976, was still relatively new.

Air Florida Flight 90 had just clipped the 14th Street Bridge and plunged into the icy Potomac. Seventy-eight motorists, passengers and crew died in that accident.

Thirty minutes later, the deadly Metro accident occurred about 4:30 p.m., near the Smithsonian station. About 1,200 people were on an Orange Line train headed to New Carrollton when it derailed while backing up from an improperly closed rail switch between the Smithsonian and Federal Triangle stations.

Investigators said a confluence of worker mistakes led to the derailment of a rail car that crushed into a concrete pillar. Two passengers died on impact and a third died later.

The victims included Mildred M. Morgan, 71, and Mary L. O’Meara, 25, coworkers at the Overseas Education Association, and Mariano Cortez, 46, an auditor at the Agriculture Department.

Witnesses Ruth Cannon, 28, of Capitol Heights recalled the scene in The Post in the following days. Cannon said she was standing in the aisle beside the three victims when they died.

“When we hit, everything just crashed in as though the tunnel had caved in,” Cannon said. “We hit so hard. We weren’t going that fast .?.?. All I saw was glass on top of me. The side of the train was pushed upwards over me. I was taller than the people standing around me; I was just amazed.”

Metro’s in-house investigation of the crash concluded that a wide range of employes committed a series of dangerous errors before and after the accident. Two workers were suspended without pay and barred from returning to jobs that involved operating trains. Metro also changed some of its procedures and issued new instructions to employees.
 
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