Close X
Thursday, December 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCAF to test rapid rescue response time as new planes remain in limbo

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2015 01:51 PM
  • RCAF to test rapid rescue response time as new planes remain in limbo

OTTAWA — The air force is planning to test an expanded, more flexible response time for search and rescue along the East Coast in the coming year, even as long-delayed plans for new aircraft remain in a holding pattern.

National Defence has been quietly evaluating the merits of positioning its helicopters and fixed-wing planes to respond within 30 minutes of an emergency call, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

An around-the-clock half-hour response time is an idea the air force has long dismissed as too costly and manpower-intensive.

But in the wake of a harsh auditor general's report in the spring of 2013, National Defence began a series of assessments with different squadrons around the country, including bases in Trenton, Ont., Winnipeg, and Victoria, B.C.

Documents obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act show the evaluation will be expanded to Halifax this summer.

The Harper government was expected to issue a call for tenders last year in the decade-long program to buy new fixed-wing search planes, but that didn't happen, and a proposal is still months away.

MORE National ARTICLES

Bill Cosby's three Ontario shows set to go ahead despite opposition

Bill Cosby's three Ontario shows set to go ahead despite opposition
Maureen Dragasevich still has fond memories of gathering with her family to listen to Bill Cosby's jokes as a kid. When she heard the comedian would be performing in Ontario, she and her siblings bought tickets to a show as a birthday present for their father, all in an attempt to relive what was once a family tradition.

Bill Cosby's three Ontario shows set to go ahead despite opposition

Dalhousie professors go public about complaint against dentistry students

Dalhousie professors go public about complaint against dentistry students
HALIFAX — Four faculty members of Halifax's Dalhousie University say a complaint they filed two weeks ago about male students allegedly posting sexually hateful messages online about females has not been addressed by administration.

Dalhousie professors go public about complaint against dentistry students

Dozens of people rescued after chairlift malfunction at Quebec ski resort

Dozens of people rescued after chairlift malfunction at Quebec ski resort
LAC-SAINTE-MARIE, Que. — Dozens of skiers and snowboarders had to be rescued after being trapped on a broken chairlift at a ski resort near Ottawa on Saturday.

Dozens of people rescued after chairlift malfunction at Quebec ski resort

Man's rental car seized for 45 days in central Ontario drug bust

Man's rental car seized for 45 days in central Ontario drug bust
BARRIE, Ont. — A central Ontario man is going to have a tough time explaining this one to the car rental agency.

Man's rental car seized for 45 days in central Ontario drug bust

4.5 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes 208 Kilometres West Of Vancouver Island, No Damage Expected

4.5 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes 208 Kilometres West Of Vancouver Island, No Damage Expected
VANCOUVER — A 4.5 magnitude earthquake has struck 208 kilometres west of the northern tip of Vancouver Island.

4.5 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes 208 Kilometres West Of Vancouver Island, No Damage Expected

Severe Beating Of A Nurse By A Patient At A Toronto Hospital Raises Safety Concerns

Severe Beating Of A Nurse By A Patient At A Toronto Hospital Raises Safety Concerns
TORONTO - The severe beating of a nurse by a patient at a Toronto hospital this week is just one of a growing number of violent incidents against nurses at mental-health facilities across Ontario, their union said.

Severe Beating Of A Nurse By A Patient At A Toronto Hospital Raises Safety Concerns