A pilot had been told to wait to take off before planes collided on Houston runway, NTSB says

FILE - People walk in William P. Hobby Airport, Aug. 31, 2017, in Houston. Flights have resumed at Houston鈥檚 William P. Hobby Airport after two private jets clipped wings when they were moving on the airfield. The airport posted on X on Tuesday evening, Oct. 25, 2023 that flights resumed after debris was cleared from the airfield. No injuries were reported and the city fire department said there was no risk of fire after the collision Tuesday at the airport southeast of downtown. (Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle via AP, file)

The pilot of a twin-engine Hawker aircraft started rolling on a runway after being told to line up and wait for takeoff when the plane's wing struck the tail of a twin engine Cessna that had just landed at William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, the 黑料吃瓜网 Transportation Safety Board said Wednesday.

鈥淭he pilot of the Hawker continued the takeoff on Runway 22 before returning to land,鈥� according to on X.

An NTSB spokesperson did not immediately return a phone call for further comment.

None of the eight people on board to two airplanes 鈥� five on the Cessna and three on the Hawker 鈥� were injured, the NTSB said.

The NTSB said a six-person team of investigators was sent to the airport Wednesday, and a preliminary report on the collision is expected within 30 days.

A probable cause report on the collision will take up to two years to complete, the NTSB said.

There were 54 flights cancelled and 78 diverted from the airport southeast of downtown while operations were suspended for more than three hours, .

There has been a string of recent close calls at airports around the nation, and the Biden administration it will invest $26 million to address the problem. The money will go toward new safety measures, including automation to alert air traffic controllers about planes that are heading for the wrong runway.

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