Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Good questions' being asked about safety of Snowbirds: Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 May, 2020 07:40 PM
  • 'Good questions' being asked about safety of Snowbirds: Trudeau

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau paid tribute to members of the Canadian Armed Forces on Tuesday even as he acknowledged that "very good questions" are being asked about the safety of the Snowbirds following the aerobatics team's second plane crash in less than a year.

Capt. Jennifer Casey, a military public affairs officer, was killed in the crash. Capt. Rich MacDougall, who was piloting the Snowbirds jet, sustained serious but non-life threatening injuries. The incident followed the deaths of six military members in the crash of a Cyclone helicopter during a training activity while on a NATO mission in the Mediterranean at the end of April.

"This has been a very difficult few weeks for members of the Canadian Armed Forces," Trudeau said.

"As we honour (Casey), we pay tribute to the bravery of all those who serve today. Our women and men in uniform are always there for us. Serving overseas to defend the values we hold dear, working here at home to care for our seniors and lift our spirits with flyovers."

While the causes of both the helicopter crash and Snowbird crash remain under investigation, Sunday's was the second for the aerobatics team since October, when one of the team's planes crashed in the U.S. state of Georgia. The pilot suffered only minor injuries.

While that crash also remains under investigation, questions have been raised about whether the two incidents are related, including whether there is a problem with the Snowbirds' 57-year-old Tutor planes.

"I think there are very good questions being asked by a whole lot of people about safety," Trudeau said, "first and foremost by the (Royal Canadian Air Force), and there is going to be a proper investigation and we're going to allow them to do their work before we make assumptions about what might be the outcome of that investigation."

Snowbirds commander Lt.-Col. Mike French said Monday that while investigators are still assessing the cause of Sunday's crash, the Tutor jets are regularly torn down and rebuilt like new and undergo regular maintenance to ensure they are safe.

Several retired Air Force officers have similarly vouched for the aircraft despite its age.

They and French have also touted the importance of the aerobatics team, which started performing for crowds across Canada and the U.S. in 1970, even as some have questioned whether it should be grounded for good.

Those questions are expected to only grow if problems are identified with the Tutors, which were supposed to have been retired in 2010, and as the federal government looks to cut spending following the COVID-19 pandemic.

"My main concern is for people not to use this as a reason to question the value of the Snowbirds," former Air Force commander Andre Deschamps said in an interview.

"It's an outstanding motivational tool for both recruitment and for the pilots. ... It still is a powerful tool for both morale, motivation, engaging with the public. But we have to make sure it's done safely."

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec Delays Provincial Tax Deadlines, Says Move Will Free Up $7.7 Billion

Quebec Delays Provincial Tax Deadlines, Says Move Will Free Up $7.7 Billion
MONTREAL - Quebec's finance minister is delaying the deadline for individuals and businesses to pay their provincial taxes in order to ease financial pressure caused by the novel coronavirus.    

Quebec Delays Provincial Tax Deadlines, Says Move Will Free Up $7.7 Billion

Crown Says Schlatter 'Stalked And Isolated' Woman Before Strangling Her

TORONTO - Prosecutors say a Toronto man "stalked and isolated" a young woman who had no interest in him, then lured her into an alleyway where he sexually assaulted and strangled her.    

Crown Says Schlatter 'Stalked And Isolated' Woman Before Strangling Her

Health Officials Explain Why Not Everyone Can Get Swabbed For COVID-19 Right Now

TORONTO - Canada's top public health officer says supply limitations are forcing COVID-19 testing centres "to be smart" about who they can assess for the respiratory illness while Health Canada rushes to approve commercial testing kits.    

Health Officials Explain Why Not Everyone Can Get Swabbed For COVID-19 Right Now

The Latest Numbers Of Covid-19 Cases In Canada As Of March 17, 2020

The latest numbers of confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases in Canada as of 11 a.m. ET on March 17, 2020:    

The Latest Numbers Of Covid-19 Cases In Canada As Of March 17, 2020

Commons Likely To Sit Again To Pass Economic Response To Covid-19, Trudeau Says

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Parliament will likely sit again to pass emergency measures for the economy during the COVID-19 pandemic.    

Commons Likely To Sit Again To Pass Economic Response To Covid-19, Trudeau Says

Quebec Warns No Emergency Shelters For Spring Flooding Amid Covid-19 Outbreak

MONTREAL - Quebec's public security minister is warning that due to the novel coronavirus outbreak, the province will not be able to open emergency shelters in the event of spring flooding.    

Quebec Warns No Emergency Shelters For Spring Flooding Amid Covid-19 Outbreak