๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, April 04, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is sustaining immense pressure this weekend, with total available loads holding at a massive 220,488 and the market average rate firming at $2.65/mile. Capacity is structurally tightening across all equipment types as outbound tender rejections climb, signaling widespread routing guide failures as carriers push back against contracted rates. This capacity crunch is heavily exacerbated by a punishing $5.583/gallon national diesel average and severe, widespread flooding across the Midwest, South, and Northeast that is fracturing major transcontinental corridors. Brokers must prioritize aggressive fuel surcharge negotiations and secure capacity early, as carriers are actively rejecting low-yield freight and demanding heavy hazard premiums to navigate flooded regions and high-wind zones.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Midwest River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IN, MI, MO, OH, WI)): Extensive river flooding is inundating major freight corridors including I-80, I-70, and I-90. Carriers are actively rejecting freight that routes through these zones, severely tightening regional capacity and driving massive detour premiums.
- Southern Plains Flooding (South (OK, TX)): Excessive runoff and river flooding are threatening low-lying areas and poor drainage zones. This is likely to slow transit times and reduce capacity availability along the I-35 and I-40 corridors as carriers avoid water-logged routes.
- Northeast River Flooding (New York (NY, Erie and Niagara Counties)): Minor flooding along the Tonawanda Creek is threatening local roads and farm areas. While major interstates remain open, local pickup and delivery operations face delays, tightening first- and last-mile capacity in Upstate New York.
- High Wind Warning (Southwest Texas and Southeast New Mexico (TX, NM)): Northeast winds gusting up to 60 mph are creating extreme blow-over risks for high-profile vehicles, including dry vans and empty trailers. Expect immediate capacity tightening and delayed transits through the Guadalupe Mountains region.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Southern Plains risk is becoming more localized than systemic
Flood exposure in Oklahoma and north Texas is increasingly concentrated around low-water crossings, frontage roads, and shipper approaches rather than a broad shutdown of I-35 or I-40. With drier conditions building Sunday and Monday, linehaul transit through the region should normalize faster than Midwest origins, making Texas reload strategy more attractive than it appeared 24 hours ago.
- Keep extra buffer on pickups and deliveries in industrial parks and rural facilities.
- Treat Monday Texas outbound as a stronger recovery market than Monday Midwest outbound.
Weather Insight
West Texas wind remains a same-day pricing trigger
The Guadalupe Mountains corridor is still the most immediate weather premium in the network today. Gusts near 60 mph will sideline empty vans, light reefers, and open-deck moves through the mountain passes, and carriers will not absorb that rollover risk inside a standard quote.
- Delay high-profile equipment departures through far west Texas and southeast New Mexico until winds ease.
- If the load must move today, price a route-around or a staged layover up front rather than negotiating after the truck stops.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global energy market volatility continues to exert upward pressure on diesel futures, suggesting the current $5.583/gallon average will persist or climb, forcing carriers to remain defensive on long-haul pricing.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small to mid-sized fleets are facing intense cash flow pressure as the gap between immediate fuel expenses and 30-day freight payments widens, leading to increased carrier selectivity and localized capacity drop-offs.
- Economic Indicators: Persistent supply-side inflation is driving up operational costs across the logistics sector, prompting major retailers and e-commerce platforms to implement their own fuel and logistics surcharges to protect margins.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
Spot Rates Rally as Tender Rejections Climb Across All Equipment Types ๐:
Real-time market data confirms a sustained rally in spot rates driven by climbing outbound tender rejections. Routing guides are failing as carriers push back against contracted rates that no longer cover elevated fuel and operating costs. Brokers must adjust pricing models immediately, as historical data shows this level of tender rejection inevitably leads to prolonged spot market inflation. Sales teams should proactively warn shippers that routing guide compliance will remain poor through Q2.
-
Dry Van Spot Rates Surge 30% Year-Over-Year Amid Supply-Side Inflation ๐:
The 30% YoY increase in dry van spot rates highlights a structural capacity crunch driven by supply-side inflation rather than just temporary seasonal spikes. Carriers are finally gaining the pricing power needed to offset the punishing $5.583/gallon diesel costs. Brokers must abandon outdated historical pricing models and quote based on real-time capacity constraints. Carrier reps should focus on securing dedicated capacity agreements to protect margins against further spot rate escalation.
-
Amazon Implements 3.5% Fuel and Logistics Surcharge on Sellers ๐:
Amazon's decision to pass elevated logistics and fuel costs onto third-party sellers sets a massive industry precedent. With major e-commerce and parcel carriers implementing surcharges, freight brokers have strong leverage to demand comprehensive fuel surcharges from their own shippers. Sales teams should use this development in customer conversations to justify rate increases, emphasizing that even the largest logistics networks can no longer absorb current energy costs.
News Insight
Fuel should be quoted as a live variable, not folded into all-in linehaul
With diesel above $5.58 and major logistics networks openly passing fuel costs downstream, the market has moved beyond monthly surcharge logic. On long-haul spot freight, especially out of the Midwest, separating linehaul from fuel with short quote validity is becoming the cleaner way to protect margin when detours and idle time can change trip economics after the truck accepts.
๐ Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time platforms show a massive 220,488 available loads, with the gap between posted and paid rates widening. Carriers are successfully negotiating rates upward at the time of booking, indicating strong carrier pricing leverage.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Midwest (OH, IN, IL) due to severe flooding, and in the South (TX, OK) where early produce season is absorbing reefer equipment. Flatbed capacity is universally scarce.
- Technology Disruptions: The industry is seeing a rapid acceleration in automated fuel surcharge calculators integrated into TMS platforms, allowing brokers to dynamically adjust quotes based on localized diesel spikes rather than national averages.
๐ฅ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are scrambling to secure capacity for spring inventory positioning, but are facing strict carrier pushback on lanes exceeding 500 miles without substantial fuel compensation.
- Manufacturing: Industrial manufacturing is driving the massive 98,761 flatbed load count. Shippers are facing severe routing guide failures and are increasingly reliant on the spot market to keep production lines moving.
- Agriculture: Early produce season in the Sunbelt is heavily taxing reefer capacity. The combination of temperature-controlled demand and $5.583/gallon diesel is pushing paid reefer rates to $2.90/mile.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers in the Midwest are experiencing severe transit delays due to regional flooding, forcing a shift toward expedited and team-transit solutions to prevent assembly line shutdowns.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Midwest (OH, IN, IL, MI)
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategic freight region, driven by a collision of severe river flooding, massive flatbed demand, and critical capacity shortages. Flooding across Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois is fracturing major East-West corridors (I-80, I-70, I-90), forcing carriers into lengthy detours that consume expensive diesel. Consequently, carriers are either rejecting Midwest-bound freight or demanding massive hazard and fuel premiums. Simultaneously, the region is a epicenter for the spring flatbed boom, creating intense competition for specialized equipment.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL โ Dallas, TX: This major North-South corridor is experiencing extreme rate pressure as carriers demand heavy premiums to load out of the flood-impacted Illinois market and make the 900+ mile transit south. Van and reefer demand is strong, but the $5.583/gallon diesel average makes this long-haul route highly expensive to operate.
Indianapolis, IN โ Atlanta, GA: This lane is heavily disrupted by severe flooding in Indiana, severely limiting outbound capacity. Flatbed and van shippers are competing fiercely for the few trucks willing to navigate the local detours before heading south to the booming Atlanta market.
Regional Insight
Clearing skies will not quickly loosen Midwest capacity
The Midwest weather pattern turns drier and cooler Sunday through Tuesday, but that is more likely to shift the problem from active rainfall to lingering closures, bridge checks, trapped equipment, and a wave of deferred freight. Outbound pricing from Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and southern Michigan is likely to stay dislocated into early next week, with the sharpest rate pressure arriving once shippers try to clear weekend backlogs.
Regional Insight
Southbound freight should execute better than east-west Midwest freight
Carriers are showing more appetite for loads that exit the flooded Midwest and reposition into stronger reload markets such as Texas and the Southeast than for freight that must keep traversing disrupted east-west corridors. That keeps Chicago-to-Dallas and Indianapolis-to-Atlanta relatively more executable than comparable-length lanes staying inside the Midwest or running toward the Great Lakes, provided pickup windows are flexible enough to absorb local access delays.
๐จ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Midwest (IL, IN, OH) due to severe flooding
- Inbound Pacific Northwest due to record fuel costs
- Sunbelt Reefer lanes (TX, FL, AZ) due to produce season
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Flatbed capacity is critically short nationwide (98,761 loads). Reefer capacity is severely constrained in the South. Van capacity is tight in the Midwest due to weather avoidance.
Opportunity Zones:
- Short-haul regional lanes under 350 miles where carriers can minimize fuel exposure
- Outbound Texas lanes heading East
- Southeast port drayage and transloading networks
๐ฏ Strategic Recommendations for Today
๐ผ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Routing guides are failing nationwide as carriers reject contracted rates in the face of $5.583 diesel and severe weather disruptions. We must adjust spot pricing to secure reliable capacity, as the market is experiencing a structural tightening.
Action: Proactively audit all Q2 routing guides. Identify lanes where tender rejections are highest and immediately propose dynamic spot pricing or updated fuel surcharges to prevent service failures.
๐ For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus sourcing efforts on regional owner-operators who are avoiding long-haul freight due to fuel costs. Prioritize securing flatbed capacity days in advance of ship dates.
Negotiation Leverage: Use destination market strength as leverage. Offer lanes heading into the Southeast or Texas where carriers can easily secure high-paying outbound loads, offsetting the initial fuel burden.
Strategic Insight
Pre-book Monday recovery trucks before the backlog surfaces
The next strong margin window is likely to be Monday morning into Monday afternoon, when deferred Midwest freight collides with still-imperfect road access. Capacity decisions made today and Sunday will matter more than same-day load board shopping after the rebound starts.
- Source trucks delivering into Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, and the Southeast that can deadhead into Indiana and Illinois without sitting in flood zones all weekend.
- On Chicago-to-Dallas and Indianapolis-to-Atlanta, keep layover, detention, and weather-delay charges separate from linehaul so service failures do not erase margin after booking.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Expect Midwest spot pressure to remain elevated into Monday and Tuesday even as rain tapers; backlog will replace weather as the main constraint.
- Southbound freight into Texas and the Southeast is still easier to place than east-west freight that stays inside disrupted Midwest networks.
- Protect margin by splitting fuel and delay-related accessorials from linehaul on long-haul spot quotes.
- Avoid committing empty or light high-profile equipment through the far west Texas mountain corridor until winds ease.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a broker execution market first, a volume market second.
- Total available loads sit at 220,488, up 20.0% from 183,682.
- The national average rate is holding at $2.65/mile.
- When volume jumps that hard and the average rate stays firm, the message is not โcheap trucks existโ โ it is โcapacity is selective, and the wrong freight will fail.โ
Diesel at $5.583/gallon is the main market filter.
- Carriers are not just pricing miles; they are pricing fuel risk, detours, idle time, and reload certainty.
- Long-haul cheap freight is getting screened out, especially if it touches flood corridors or weak reload markets.
Open-deck is still where the marketโs bargaining power lives.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 166,664 loads, which is about 75.6% of the full board.
- That is where carrier attention, shipper pain, and broker margin opportunity are most concentrated today.
Weather has turned the Midwest into a schedule-risk market, not just a rate-risk market.
- Flooding around Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and nearby corridors is breaking normal east-west execution.
- Southbound freight leaving the Midwest is more executable than freight trying to stay inside disrupted Midwest networks.
Monday capacity is being decided today.
- The best brokers this weekend will not be the ones who โshop Monday morning.โ
- They will be the ones who pre-book recovery trucks now before deferred freight hits the board all at once.
๐ง What the market is really saying
The load board looks big, but the useful capacity pool is smaller than it appears.
- In stressed markets, posted truck counts overstate real coverage because carriers become lane-selective, appointment-selective, and risk-selective.
- A truck is not truly available if it will not take:
- flood-exposed freight,
- high-wind exposure,
- long-haul freight with weak fuel coverage,
- or receivers with dwell history.
The paid-versus-posted gap tells you where the negotiations are actually happening.
- Van: $2.37 paid vs. $2.36 posted = +$0.01/mile
- This is a service market, not a fat spread market.
- Reefer: $2.90 paid vs. $2.83 posted = +$0.07/mile
- Tightening fast, especially where produce and weather overlap.
- Flatbed: $3.02 paid vs. $2.96 posted = +$0.06/mile
- Strong volume, firm pricing, still highly workable for good brokers.
- Heavy Haul: $3.04 paid vs. $3.04 posted = flat
- Efficient market; spec accuracy matters more than haggling.
- Specialized: $3.02 paid vs. $2.75 posted = +$0.27/mile
- Best raw margin structure on the board if your matching is precise.
- LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial: $1.83 paid vs. $1.73 posted = +$0.10/mile
- Good tactical outlet for customers who cannot absorb full truckload repricing.
Carrier psychology is crystal clear today.
- Carriers want:
- shorter turns,
- daylight pickups,
- clean shipper/receiver notes,
- separate fuel treatment,
- and visible reloads.
- They do not want:
- vague appointment windows,
- unpaid detention risk,
- weather-sensitive long hauls,
- or freight that strands them in weak Monday reload markets.
๐ฏ Where brokers can make the most money today
Best volume-and-margin engine: Open-deck
- Flatbed at 98,761 loads and $3.02/mile paid remains the core production mode.
- Heavy haul at 43,240 loads and $3.04/mile paid supports premium execution if quoting is disciplined.
- Specialized at 24,663 loads and $3.02/mile paid offers the best spread opportunity, but only for brokers who vet equipment correctly.
Fastest tightening mode: Reefer
- 13,178 loads, up 66.9%, at $2.90/mile paid is the strongest tightening signal on the board.
- This is where brokers get punished for quoting first and sourcing later.
Best customer-defense tool: LTL / Partial
- 12,350 loads at $1.83/mile paid gives you a relationship-saving option for rate-sensitive customers.
- Use it selectively on freight where transit flexibility exists.
Best lane posture: Southbound out of the Midwest
- Freight exiting Illinois, Indiana, or Ohio into Texas and the Southeast is still easier to place than freight moving east-west through the disrupted Midwest belt.
- Carriers will accept pain at origin more readily when the destination improves their Monday reload position.
๐ Mode-by-mode broker playbook
๐ฆ Dry Van
Market read
- 28,296 loads, up 30.1%, with $2.37/mile paid.
- The spread is thin, which means margin discipline matters more than rate aggression.
How to play it
- Cover weather-exposed Midwest vans early.
- Favor short- and mid-haul freight over underpriced long-haul freight.
- Sell flexibility, not cheapness:
- flexible pickup windows,
- flexible delivery windows,
- and clear reload opportunities.
Avoid
- Hard appointment freight through flood-affected corridors
- Cheap 700+ mile van quotes with hidden detention or fuel exposure
๐ง Reefer
Market read
- 13,178 loads, up 66.9%, with $2.90/mile paid.
- Produce season plus diesel plus weather equals carrier cherry-picking.
How to play it
- Pre-cover before selling certainty.
- Put in writing:
- temperature requirements,
- reefer fuel expectations,
- washout terms,
- detention,
- and late-delivery exceptions tied to weather.
- Lean on known reefer incumbents rather than shopping unknown weekend capacity.
Avoid
- Quote-and-pray reefer execution
- Saturday pickup assumptions based on Friday economics
๐๏ธ Flatbed
Market read
- 98,761 loads, with $3.02/mile paid.
- This remains the best same-day production mode for disciplined desks.
How to play it
- Prioritize project freight, machinery, steel, and construction materials.
- Quote with internal separation for:
- linehaul,
- fuel,
- tarping,
- securement,
- jobsite delay risk.
- Push shippers to commit same day; do not let project quotes float.
Avoid
- Generic posting on site-sensitive freight
- Underpricing muddy jobsites or crane-timed deliveries
๐ Heavy Haul
Market read
- 43,240 loads with $3.04/mile paid.
- Paid matching posted means the market is already efficient.
How to play it
- Do not quote without full dimensions, weight, axle needs, and permit timing.
- Route around flood risk before quoting, not after.
- Tell customers plainly: waiting to finalize specs is more expensive than planning correctly up front.
Avoid
- Same-day hero pricing without permit and route review
- Assuming normal routing through flood-disrupted Midwest corridors
๐งฐ Specialized
Market read
- 24,663 loads with $3.02/mile paid.
- The +$0.27/mile paid-posted spread is the cleanest broker opportunity on the board.
How to play it
- Treat every load like a mini-project, not a commodity shipment.
- Verify:
- exact trailer type,
- commodity handling,
- loading method,
- securement expectations,
- escort or route restrictions if relevant.
Avoid
- Wide posting before validating specs
- Trying to cover niche freight with โclose enoughโ equipment
๐ฆ LTL / Partial
Market read
- 12,350 loads with $1.83/mile paid.
- This is not just overflow freight now; it is a strategic margin and retention tool.
How to play it
- Offer partial/LTL when:
- the customer is price-sensitive,
- the freight is not appointment-fragile,
- and full truckload pricing has broken tolerance.
- Build around existing carrier loops and known consolidation patterns.
Avoid
- Selling LTL as a direct substitute for time-critical truckload
- Ignoring transit variability in flood-impacted terminal networks
๐ง๏ธ Regional tactics that matter today
๐ Midwest flood belt
Core read
- The Midwest is not just weather-impacted; it is network-fractured.
- The real problem is shifting from rainfall to lingering closures, bridge checks, trapped equipment, missed appointments, and deferred freight.
Broker actions
- Verify facility access the day of pickup and the day of delivery.
- Add detour, detention, layover, and weather exception language before dispatch.
- Pad transit proactively on freight touching I-80, I-70, and I-90 exposures.
โฌ๏ธ Midwest-to-South freight
Core read
- This is your best execution category for the next 24โ72 hours.
- Carriers prefer freight that helps them escape disrupted Midwest operating zones and land in better reload markets.
Broker actions
- Sell the reload story:
- Texas
- Georgia
- Tennessee
- Carolinas
- On lanes like Chicago to Dallas and Indianapolis to Atlanta, keep:
- linehaul,
- fuel,
- delay-related accessorials
separate internally and, when useful, externally.
๐ฆ๏ธ Texas and Oklahoma
Core read
- Flood exposure is becoming more localized than systemic.
- That matters because the market will start treating Texas outbound as recovery freight faster than the Midwest.
Broker actions
- Build Monday Texas reload strategy now.
- Give buffer for:
- industrial park access,
- rural shipper driveways,
- local frontage-road issues.
- Do not overprice all Texas linehaul as if the whole region is shut down.
๐ฌ๏ธ Far West Texas / Southeast New Mexico
Core read
- This is a same-day pricing trigger, not a background detail.
- High-profile equipment exposure here can create immediate layover or reroute costs.
Broker actions
- Delay empty or lightly loaded vans, reefers, and open-deck departures if possible.
- If the load must move, quote the route-around or staged stop up front.
๐ Western New York first/last mile
Core read
- The bigger risk is local pickup and delivery friction, not full interstate collapse.
Broker actions
- Protect detention
- Confirm dock status
- Avoid promising โnormalโ local service around Erie/Niagara pickups and deliveries
๐ฐ Pricing strategy that protects margin today
Use a 3-bucket quote model on exposed freight
- Linehaul
- Fuel
- Disruption premium
- detours,
- appointment rigidity,
- layover exposure,
- weather hold risk
Do not bury everything into one vague all-in number internally.
- If your rep cannot explain where the rate comes from, that load is already at risk of margin leakage.
Shorten quote validity on volatile freight
- Especially on:
- Midwest origins
- reefer
- specialized
- weather-sensitive long haul
Best customer framing
- Use language like:
- โWe can cover this, but todayโs price reflects live fuel, route risk, and replacement-truck economics.โ
- That reframes the conversation from broker markup to service continuity.
Anchor shippers to consequence, not nostalgia
- Many customers will mentally compare todayโs rate to a cleaner market.
- Your job is to move them from โWhy is this higher?โ to โWhat does failure cost if we wait?โ
๐ค Carrier strategy to win scarce trucks
Sell certainty
- Carriers respond faster when they see:
- exact commodity,
- exact weight,
- exact facility notes,
- exact appointment flexibility,
- and expected reload options.
Best carrier pitch today
- โThis gets you out of the Midwest and into a stronger reload market.โ
- โFuel and delay-related costs are being handled clearly.โ
- โPickup is verified and facility notes are clean.โ
Where not to over-negotiate
- Reefer
- Specialized
- Flood-exposed Midwest freight
- Any lane involving high-wind route exposure
Where you can still buy intelligently
- Simple regional van
- Southbound Midwest freight
- Partials built around existing loops
- Open-deck loads with clear site conditions and no spec ambiguity
Risk filter for carrier selection
- On difficult weekend freight, favor:
- known carriers,
- verified identity,
- recent communication reliability,
- and drivers with realistic route understanding.
- Stressed markets create more re-trades, no-shows, and weak assumptions.
๐ 24โ72 hour outlook with probability-weighted scenarios
Base case โ 55% probability: Monday and Tuesday stay tight in the Midwest
- Deferred freight replaces active rainfall as the main problem.
- Expect rate pressure, missed appointment recovery freight, and selective capacity.
Partial reset โ 30% probability: South and Central markets normalize faster than Midwest markets
- Texas and Southeast execution improves faster.
- Good brokers benefit by positioning trucks southbound now.
Faster normalization โ 15% probability: weather fallout clears quicker than expected
- Even in that case, specialized, flatbed, and reefer do not loosen much, because diesel and seasonal demand are still doing the tightening.
Most likely Monday winners
- Midwest-to-South freight
- Flatbed and specialized with pre-committed carriers
- Texas outbound reload planning
- Recovery freight from missed weekend appointments
Most likely pain points
- Midwest east-west lanes
- Hard appointment freight with no accessorial protection
- Late-booked reefer
- Permit-sensitive heavy haul touching altered routes
โ
Desk priorities for the rest of today
Cover Midwest weather-exposed freight before the replacement market gets thinner
- Prioritize Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and southern Michigan origins.
Pre-book Monday recovery trucks
- Target trucks delivering into:
- Kentucky
- Tennessee
- Missouri
- the Southeast
- Then pull them into Indiana and Illinois before backlog pricing spikes.
Shift sales and carrier time toward open-deck and specialized
- That is where the board is deepest and the economics are strongest.
Require pre-coverage discipline on reefer
- No soft quoting on high-risk reefer lanes.
Use LTL / Partial to defend shipper relationships
- Especially where customers cannot absorb full truckload weekend volatility.
Separate fuel and disruption costs from linehaul on long-haul spot freight
- This is one of the easiest ways to prevent margin bleed after booking.
Tighten paperwork and confirmation language
- Put in writing:
- detention,
- layover,
- weather delays,
- reroute exposure,
- facility access issues.
๐ What a strong broker day looks like
Coverage timing
- Most flood-exposed freight covered before the late-day repricing cycle
Margin protection
- No hidden fuel or delay exposure on Midwest, reefer, specialized, or wind-sensitive freight
Execution quality
- Fewer after-hours recoveries
- Fewer carrier re-trades
- Fewer missed appointments caused by bad facility assumptions
Customer retention
- Every rate-sensitive shipper gets an alternative path
- premium truckload,
- flexible truckload,
- or LTL / Partial
Carrier stickiness
- More loads sold with reload logic, not one-off desperation pricing
๐
This Day in History
1967: Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his "Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence" speech in New York City's Riverside Church.
1984: President Ronald Reagan calls for an international ban on chemical weapons.
2011: Georgian Airways Flight 834 crashes at N'djili Airport in Kinshasa, killing 32.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Don't let your mind stop you."
โ Steve Harvey