Lightning struck Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport Thursday, injuring one worker and shutting down flight operations, officials say.
Lightning struck the airport’s air traffic control tower at 2:21 p.m. Thursday. The FAA suspended arrivals and departures until about 4:45 p.m., a BWI spokesman told the Associated Press.
Urgent: Has Putin Trumped Obama On Syria? Vote Here
John Dunkerly, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, said that he had just left the tower when the lightning strike, which he said hit a runway, occurred. He said a traffic management coordinator who was turning on equipment in the tower was shocked when the electricity traveled to the tower.
Dunkerly says the worker was taken to a hospital. An FAA official said the worker did not appear to be seriously injured.
The lightning strike dumbfounded the controllers on duty, said Dunkerly, who added that he has never heard of such an incident in nearly 30 years in the industry. It also underscored concerns about safety in the 30-year-old tower, he said.
"We didn't have any idea why it happened," Dunkerly
told the Baltimore Sun. "Usually [the towers] are pretty safe during these storms."
Urgent: Should Obamacare be Repealed? Vote Here Now
Related stories:
Los Angeles Airport Worker Held over 9/11 'Threats'
TSA Program Will Speed up Airport Security Transit for Many