Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Airport Screening Agency Sorry For Refusing To Pat Down British Columbia Man Robert Hart

The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2015 12:38 PM
    TERRACE, B.C. — The agency responsible for screening at Canadian airports says a "big mistake" was made when a retired social worker was prevented from boarding a flight because an all-female security crew refused to frisk him.
     
    Robert Hart has an artificial hip that set off the metal detector at the airport in Terrace, B.C. in July. He was on his way to a family wedding in Ontario.
     
    He says he agreed to be patted down by one of the four female Canadian Air Transport Security Authority officers on duty, but they cited a same-sex pat-down policy and refused. They wouldn't take him up on his offer to have his wife chaperon the search and there were no RCMP officers on duty to step in.
     
    The only solution was to book another flight for when a male officer was on shift.
     
    "It was a surreal experience," Hart said Wednesday from his home in Terrace. "I said to the lady, 'I always beep,' and she replied, 'You're not going to be on this flight.'
     
    "You instantly get that feeling of this is too crazy for words ... This is just going to go sideways right now. I know it is."
     
    He left the airport and took a later flight that departed when a male officer was on duty.
     
    Hart complained to the security authority, which found his concern was justified.
     
    "It was pretty easy," said the agency's Mathieu Larocque. "We made a big mistake. The screening officers at the airport should have been screening that passenger. He should have been allowed to get on his flight."
     
    Larocque said the same-sex screening policy has been in place since 2010, but there are directives in place for situations such as Hart's. He declined to say what those were, but said that staff have been reminded of the procedures.
     
    The agency apologized to Hart in a letter and suggested he file a compensation claim for the $100 the delay cost him.
     
    Hart was impressed with how his complaint was handled and hopes nobody else will have a similar problem.
     
    "The letter came through and was unequivocal: 'We have a policy and it wasn't followed,'" he said.
     
    "They said that airport won't ever err on that side again and, in fact, they were going to make sure all other airports get that policy refreshed as well."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Worker Thrown Width Of Football Field After Being Struck By SUV: RCMP

    Saskatchewan Worker Thrown Width Of Football Field After Being Struck By SUV: RCMP
    A highway flag person who was struck and killed by a SUV was thrown nearly 60 metres, a Saskatchewan RCMP officer testified Thursday.

    Saskatchewan Worker Thrown Width Of Football Field After Being Struck By SUV: RCMP

    Alberta Justice Minister Says Access To Legal Help Approaching 'Crisis Point'

    Alberta Justice Minister Says Access To Legal Help Approaching 'Crisis Point'
    Kathleen Ganley told a Canadian Bar Association convention in Calgary that there needs to be a review of the province's legal aid since it appears to barely be getting the job done.

    Alberta Justice Minister Says Access To Legal Help Approaching 'Crisis Point'

    Blue Jays Fever Not Contained To Toronto; Spreads From Coast To Coast

    Blue Jays Fever Not Contained To Toronto; Spreads From Coast To Coast
    What sport is shaping Canadian travel plans, filling the nation's sports bars and stirring national pride from coast to coast? If you said hockey, you'd be wrong.

    Blue Jays Fever Not Contained To Toronto; Spreads From Coast To Coast

    Tom Mulcair burnishes NDP's economic credentials; Duffy trial dogs Harper up north

    Tom Mulcair burnishes NDP's economic credentials; Duffy trial dogs Harper up north
    OTTAWA — Tom Mulcair is in Tory territory today to burnish the NDP's fiscal bona fides, while his Conservative rival returned the favour in a New Democrat riding with a promise to pave a key Northwest Territories highway.

    Tom Mulcair burnishes NDP's economic credentials; Duffy trial dogs Harper up north

    Fight Outside Vancouver's Nightclub Leaves 60-Year-Old Man Dead

    Fight Outside Vancouver's Nightclub Leaves  60-Year-Old Man Dead
    What began as a nightclub fight and resulted in minor injuries has turned into a murder investigation in Vancouver

    Fight Outside Vancouver's Nightclub Leaves 60-Year-Old Man Dead

    1 Man Dead, 6 Officers Injured After Vancouver Police Altercation

    1 Man Dead, 6 Officers Injured After Vancouver Police Altercation
    Police Unsuccessfully Tried To Subdue Him With Chemical Agents And A Physical Altercation Ensued, Causing Fatal Injuries To The Man.

    1 Man Dead, 6 Officers Injured After Vancouver Police Altercation