Close X
Saturday, October 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Grateful There Were No Injuries:' Small Plane Touches Down On Calgary Street

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Apr, 2018 11:58 AM
    CALGARY — A small plane carrying six people made an emergency landing on a Calgary street on Wednesday morning.
     
     
    Police say the twin-engine plane was coming in from the south, heading for a landing at the Calgary airport, when a pilot radioed in that the aircraft was low on fuel.
     
     
    Sgt. Duane Lepchuk said the aircraft came down shortly before 6 a.m. on a two-lane stretch of 36th Street, about five kilometres south of the airport and not far from the Trans-Canada Highway.
     
     
    There were no injuries among the four passengers and two crew members.
     
     
    Lepchuk said there was minimal traffic on the street at the time and no reports of drivers having to swerve to miss the plane.
     
     
    Jason Hollyoak told CTV Calgary that he saw the plane make an incredible landing.
     
     
    "I would say he was just trying to keep it underneath all the light poles and street lights and everything. He had to have flown over probably two or three cars," Hollyoak said.
     
     
    The plane remained on the street during the busy morning commute and police set up detours around the scene.
     
     
    Super T Aviation of Medicine Hat, Alta. said in a statement that the plane was forced to land "due to a loss of power of unknown cause."
     
     
    Two pilots and four passengers were on the Piper Navajo. Super T's owner, Terri Super, was heading to Calgary to help the Transportation Safety Board with its investigation.
     
     
    "Ms. Super acknowledges the actions of the pilots to ensure a safe landing and is grateful that there were no injuries to those on board or on the ground," said the statement.
     
     
    TSB spokesman Alexandre Fournier said two investigators from Edmonton were on their way to the scene.
     
     
     
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Suffered Severe Injuries In Fatal Encounter With Police, Watchdog Says

    B.C. Man Suffered Severe Injuries In Fatal Encounter With Police, Watchdog Says
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's police watchdog is shedding light on the severe injuries suffered by a man during a deadly encounter with Vancouver police in a court document seeking an order for an officer to be interviewed as a witness.

    B.C. Man Suffered Severe Injuries In Fatal Encounter With Police, Watchdog Says

    Canadian Home Sales Gain Ground In September, But Down From Year Ago Mark

    Canadian Home Sales Gain Ground In September, But Down From Year Ago Mark
    OTTAWA — The number of homes sold in September climbed for the second month in a row after a slowdown earlier this year that was led by a cooling in the Toronto market.

    Canadian Home Sales Gain Ground In September, But Down From Year Ago Mark

    Small Cities And Their Malls Brace For Pending Sears Store Closures

    Small Cities And Their Malls Brace For Pending Sears Store Closures
     At Heritage Place Mall in Owen Sound, Ont., an empty Sears department store would leave a mammoth void. The insolvent retailer is one of the mall's largest occupants. 

    Small Cities And Their Malls Brace For Pending Sears Store Closures

    Punjab Constable's Wife Set Afire By Her 80-Year-Old Father-In-Law In Tarn Taran, Dies

    Punjab Constable's Wife Set Afire By Her 80-Year-Old Father-In-Law In Tarn Taran, Dies
    The victim, identified as Harjinder Kaur of Burj Puhla village, suffered critical burn injuries and died at a private hospital in Amritsar today.

    Punjab Constable's Wife Set Afire By Her 80-Year-Old Father-In-Law In Tarn Taran, Dies

    Siwash Rock Name Disrespectful To First Nations Says Vancouver Park Board

    Siwash Rock Name Disrespectful To First Nations Says Vancouver Park Board
    The board has voted unanimously to work with Coast Salish Nations to determine if Siwash Rock should be renamed.

    Siwash Rock Name Disrespectful To First Nations Says Vancouver Park Board

    Doctor Warns Parents To Lock Up Medication To Prevent Theft By Teens

    Doctor Warns Parents To Lock Up Medication To Prevent Theft By Teens
    VANCOUVER — A doctor who treats chronic substance users says teenagers who steal prescription medication from their family's medicine cabinet may be at risk of becoming addicted to drugs.

    Doctor Warns Parents To Lock Up Medication To Prevent Theft By Teens