The American Airlines’ subsidiary has ties that go back decades in Ohio, and just said it was moving its headquarters to Charlotte.
Officials say a PSA Airline passenger airliner and an Army helicopter collided Wednesday night in Washington, D.C. Here's what we know about the airliner's Ohio ties.
Officials this morning say there are no survivors after a plane crash in Washington. The plane involved has ties to Ohio. What we know.
PSA Airlines is moving its corporate headquarters from the Midwest to Charlotte, the company announced Wednesday.
PSA Airlines, a subsidiary of American Airlines, is moving its headquarters from Dayton to North Carolina. According to a release, PSA Airlines will open a new
PSA Airlines, a regional airline and subsidiary of American Airlines Group, announced today that it will relocate its corporate headquarters from Dayton, Ohio, to Charlotte, North Carolina, by026.
American Airlines Group Inc. (NASDAQ: AAL) owns PSA, which already has a large presence here operating regional flights on American’s behalf. American is based in Fort Worth, Texas, but runs its second-largest hub at Charlotte Douglas, known as CLT.
An American Airlines flight operated by PSA Airlines was involved in a midair collision with a military helicopter on Wednesday night near Washington, D.C.
A student at a local university was one of the people on board the American Airlines flight that crashed with a helicopter in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday.
An American Eagle flight crew from Charlotte was onboard a plane that collided with a military Black Hawk helicopter over the Potomac River by Washington, D.C., according to multiple media reports and at least one crew member’s family.
Cedarville University says Grace Maxwell, a junior mechanical engineering major, was on the flight from Kansas to Washington when it collided with an Army copter.
Wednesday night’s crash of an American Airlines commuter plane in Washington could be one of the worst disasters for the Fort Worth-based airline in more than two decades.