The news could not be worse for geese and many other birds in New York City  today.
Yesterday, a bird strike occurred at JFK airport:
Although the Delta plane was able to return safely back to airport without  injury to passengers (as usually occurs in bird strikes), the story was  highlighted in the national media.
Moreover, while no identification has officially been made of the bird  species, cell phone video taken on the plane suggests that it might  have been a flock of geese the airliner collided with.
Should that turn out to be the case, then no geese in NYC can be  considered safe from sharpshooters or "expanded" roundups over the  upcoming summer.
As is typical in most media stories covering geese or bird strikes, reports  are misleading and seemingly slanted to cause undue fear and paranoia in  the public.   
For example, the above report from ABC news mentions that bird strikes  have increased over the past 20 years.   It doesn't mention the vast  increases in airline traffic over that same time.   It  also states that 219 people have died worldwide due to bird strikes since  1988.  It doesn't state how many billions of people  have flown safely since 1988.  It is likely more people have died from  lightening strikes or falling tree branches over the past 24 years.
But, this is a way to generate public fear and in some cases, loathing  for birds -- (especially geese) and to build support for bird "culls."
In addition to being shown the old news clips of "miracle" flight 1549  in the Hudson every January to make a case for killing geese in New York  City, we will presumably be shown the latest footage as well if the doomed bird  indeed turns out to be a goose. 
Anyone concerned about geese need be quite worried due to latest incident  and its wide and distortive media coverage. 
One can only imagine most of the fearful public cheering when  Mayor Bloomberg announces an "expanded war" on geese while at the same time  the media runs the video footage to repeatedly remind us of the  "terror" that geese represent.
How dare birds fly in the air!
For that, they should all die. -- Rather than we return to building  four-engine planes or better utilizing and perfecting avian radar. --  PCA 
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