Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Scheduling conflicts with VIPs force Tories to keep two Challengers airborne

The Canadian Press Darpan, 24 Aug, 2014 02:02 PM
    OTTAWA - The Harper government's plan to decommission four of its six C-144 Challengers was sidelined and revisited last year because the executive jets were getting more VIP and military use than thought.
     
    Former defence minister Peter MacKay, in early 2013, ordered that the majority of the aircraft, long cast as a symbol of Liberal excess by the Conservatives, be retired within the year as they reached the end of their service life.
     
    But newly released memos, dated Nov. 18, 2013, show the plan was scaled back to the deactivation of just two planes — something the government waited until after Parliament recessed in late June to announce.
     
    The Challengers are tasked with shuttling around the prime minister, the governor general and cabinet ministers, as well as being an air ambulance for members of the military.
     
    What the air force found after MacKay issued the order was that it couldn't deliver both with just two planes because there were "multiple scheduling conflicts for Challenger support amongst Code One (Very, Very Important Persons)."
     
    The documents show the air force was quietly asked to study options and based its analysis on the "requirement to maintain the current level of service and availability provided to Code One VVIPs."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec to amend Civil Code to better protect animals from abuse

    Quebec to amend Civil Code to better protect animals from abuse
    Quebec's new agriculture minister is promising to clean up the province's bad reputation as one of the best places to be an animal abuser....

    Quebec to amend Civil Code to better protect animals from abuse

    B.C. First Nation suspends eviction to Crown after meeting with government

    B.C. First Nation suspends eviction to Crown after meeting with government
    Eviction notices to CN Rail (TSX:CNR), forest companies and sport fishermen given by a British Columbia First Nation have been suspended after the Gitxsan (Git-san) band met with provincial and federal governments on Thursday.

    B.C. First Nation suspends eviction to Crown after meeting with government

    Ebola Alert in Toronto: Precautions Taken With Patient at Brampton Civic Hospital with Ebola Risk

    Ebola Alert in Toronto: Precautions Taken With Patient at Brampton Civic Hospital with Ebola Risk
    BRAMPTON, Ont. - A patient at a hospital near Toronto has been isolated as a precautionary measure after showing flu-like symptoms similar to those characteristic of the Ebola virus, a public health official said Friday.

    Ebola Alert in Toronto: Precautions Taken With Patient at Brampton Civic Hospital with Ebola Risk

    Canadian Icebreakers head out to map Arctic sea floor

    Canadian Icebreakers head out to map Arctic sea floor
    Canada has sent two icebreakers to the High Arctic to gather scientific data in support of its plan to bid for control of the sea floor under and beyond the North Pole.

    Canadian Icebreakers head out to map Arctic sea floor

    Vancouver Island Experiencing Level 3 Drought, Government Urges Residents To Save Water

    Vancouver Island Experiencing Level 3 Drought, Government Urges Residents To Save Water
      VICTORIA - Level 3 drought conditions on Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands have prompted the British Columbia government to ask residents to cut water consumption.

    Vancouver Island Experiencing Level 3 Drought, Government Urges Residents To Save Water

    New trial ordered for B.C. Mountie who shot unarmed man

    New trial ordered for B.C. Mountie who shot unarmed man
    VANCOUVER - A new trial has been ordered for an RCMP officer convicted of aggravated assault for shooting a suspect during a traffic stop on Vancouver Island.

    New trial ordered for B.C. Mountie who shot unarmed man