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Airfield Lights Remained On After Crash In Halifax: Airport Authority

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2015 12:37 PM

    HALIFAX — The airport authority in Halifax is trying to determine why two generators failed to provide power to its terminal building Sunday morning after an Air Canada flight crashed, while another generator that keeps the airfield lights on didn't fail.

    In a statement Tuesday updating its response to the crash, airport authority president Joyce Carter also says it will likely be at least a month before the runway where the plane crashed is operational again.

    Carter says two generators that work in tandem to supply electricity to the terminal building came on but shut down shortly after. A third generator dedicated to the airfield kept running.

    "This means that there was virtually no interruption in airfield lighting," Carter says.

    Flight AC624 touched down 335 metres short of the runway at about 12:45 a.m. on Sunday, which Carter says resulted in the main feed from Nova Scotia Power being cut. Full power was restored before 2 a.m., Carter says.

    All 133 passengers and five crew on board the Airbus A320 survived the crash, although 25 people were sent to hospital.

    The airport has been criticized by passengers about its response to the crash. Carter said the authority began an internal review Tuesday morning looking at how it responded.

    Some passengers said they waited for more than an hour for emergency responders to help them as they stood outside in the midst of a snowstorm. The airport has said passengers were waiting up to 50 minutes for help.

    Carter says first responders arrived at the scene almost two kilometres away within 90 seconds.

    "Their immediate task was to ensure the plane was fully evacuated and then to take on the challenge of mitigating any chance of fire or explosion," she says.

    The plane landed on runway 05, which is now in the hands of the Transportation Safety Board of Canada as it continues its investigation.

    The runway will be released back to the airport once the board has finished its work, but Carter says it will then have to do an assessment of damage to the runway and begin clean up with Air Canada, which could take several days. It will take longer for NavCanada to replace navigational aids that were damaged by the Air Canada plane, says Carter.

    The safety board has said when the plane touched down short of the runway it hit an antenna array and lost its landing gear.

    The board said the plane became airborne again after it first touched down, leaving an extensive debris field between the antenna and the start of the runway.

    The plane slid for another 335 metres down the runway on its belly before coming to a stop.

    The board declined an interview request on Tuesday.

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