Close X
Tuesday, October 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Plane's altitude 60 metres when it went missing: TSB

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2020 10:12 PM
  • Plane's altitude 60 metres when it went missing: TSB

The Transportation Safety Board says a plane that went missing last month in British Columbia with two people on board was last recorded travelling at an altitude of about 60 metres.

The board says the Cessna 172M aircraft was travelling east at an airspeed of about 150 kilometres an hour when it disappeared from radar over the Fraser River near Maple Ridge in the afternoon of June 6.

In an update on its investigation released Wednesday, the board says the local training flight was operated by the International Flight Centre at the Boundary Bay Airport.

There was a student and flight instructor on board.

The board says the aircraft remains missing and the fate of the crew is unknown.

In June, the RCMP said someone reported seeing the plane go into the river, but searches did not find it.

MORE National ARTICLES

Call For Covid-19 Protective Equipment Spurs College, Distiller, TV Show To Help

VICTORIA - The novel coronavirus shut down the respiratory therapy program at Fanshawe College but that didn't stop the school from supplying much needed frontline equipment to fight COVID-19.    

Call For Covid-19 Protective Equipment Spurs College, Distiller, TV Show To Help

B.C. Orders Personal Service Establishments Closed, Including Salons, Spas

VANCOUVER - British Columbia's provincial health officer is ordering all salons, spas, and tattoo parlours to close in the latest measure aimed at curbing the spread of COVID-19.    

B.C. Orders Personal Service Establishments Closed, Including Salons, Spas

The Latest Developments On Covid-19 In Canada

The latest news on the COVID-19 global pandemic (all times eastern):

The Latest Developments On Covid-19 In Canada

The Latest Numbers Of Covid-19 Cases In Canada

The latest numbers of confirmed and presumptive COVID-19 cases in Canada as of 1:50 p.m. ET on March 23, 2020:    

The Latest Numbers Of Covid-19 Cases In Canada

Trudeau Points To Bailout For Help For Renters Facing Financial Crunch

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is pointing to an impending bailout package as a way to help renters affected by COVID-19, though new research suggests hundreds of thousands of households may be in dire financial straits before the federal money arrives.    

Trudeau Points To Bailout For Help For Renters Facing Financial Crunch

Veterinarians Offer Ventilators As They Fight To Be Declared Essential Service

Canada's veterinarians say they're willing to join in the efforts to address the COVID-19 pandemic, but say they're also fighting to make sure they can keep looking after the country's animals.

Veterinarians Offer Ventilators As They Fight To Be Declared Essential Service