Delta airplane hits wings on the runway while landing at LaGuardia Airport In New York Sunday night, according to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
FAA confirms to Fox News Digital that the incident happened after 10 p.m. On a trip From Jacksonville, Florida to LaGuardia.
“The left wing of the 4814 hard-working air flight hit the runway at LaGuardia Airport in New York, and the pilot performed a tour due to an unstable approach,” said an agent spokesman who shared in a statement.
Officials from the Port Authority confirmed to Fox News digital numbers that there was no harm or impact on airport operations.
Delta releases new information about Captain, first aid aircraft that crashed in Toronto

Delta plane on the tarmac of LaGuardia Airport (LGA). (Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Image)
The agency added that at the time of the login error, there were 76 customers, two pilots and two flight attendants on the plane.
The FAA explained that “doring is performed safely, routine operations at the discretion of the pilot or at the discretion of the air traffic controller.”
“It stops the landing method and returns the aircraft to altitude and configuration to safely adopt another approach. Pilots and air traffic controllers are fully directing this situation,” the FAA said.
The information is currently preliminary and it will investigate the incident, the FAA added.

According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the wing of a delta plane hit the runway at LaGuardia Airport on Sunday night. (Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Image)
As of Monday afternoon, the plane was still on the ground in LaGuardia According to WABC.
A spokesperson for Delta Airlines also shared a statement with Fox News Digital that acknowledged the incident and apologized to passengers on board.
“Effort Aviation Flying Personnel followed established procedures to safely conduct a circumference in New York-LaGuardia. The aircraft landed safely and headed to its arrival gate. We apologize to our customers for experience.”
This is not the only problem and Subsidiaries, work hard, Face it in the past few months.
Flights to Delta were forced to return to Atlanta Airport,

Delta Airbus A319 (registered N354NB) was on board before landing at Los Angeles World Airport (LAX). (iStock)
In February, a Delta Air Lines plane from Minneapolis to Toronto crashed while landing at Toronto’s Pearson Airport.
According to a previous statement from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), all 80 people evacuated Flight 4819 on board, and 19 were injured due to injuries, three of whom were taken to local hospitals.
The airline announced it would offer $30,000 to each person, without the “string” attached, meaning passengers who accept spending may still be able to take legal action.
In an interview with CBS Morning, Delta CEO Ed Bastian said in an interview with CBS Morning that despite critics’ claims, the Trump administration’s budget cuts have not negatively impacted aviation safety.
“I know the cuts were the reason for the question, but the reality is that there are more than 50,000 people working on the FAA. I know the cuts are 300 people and they are in non-critical safety features,” Bastian said.
“The Trump administration is committed to making in-depth investments in improving the overall technology used in the air traffic control system and the overall technology to modernize the sky,” Bastian added. “They are committed to hiring other controllers and investigators as well as security investigators. So no, I don’t care about that at all.”
The Toronto incident is one of several aviation disasters in recent months. One hundred and seventy-nine people died in South Korea Jeju Air Flight A crash involving Azerbaijan Airlines killed 38 people and injured 29 people during Christmas in a concrete obstacle hitting the airport.
In North America, 67 people died On January 29, a military Blackhawk helicopter collided with a commercial flight from an American Airlines in Kansas near Washington, DC. In February, 10 people died after a commuter plane crashed Alaska Coast.
Andrea Margolis and Kristine Parks of Fox News Digital contributed to the report.
Stepheny Price is a writer at Fox News Digital and Fox Business. She covers topics including missing persons, homicides, state crime cases, illegal immigration and more. Story tips and ideas can be sent to stepheny.price@fox.com