Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Snowbird jets grounded as accident investigated

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2022 03:18 PM
  • Snowbird jets grounded as accident investigated

WINNIPEG - The Royal Canadian Air Force has ordered an "operational pause" for its Snowbird air demonstration squadron jets after a crash earlier this month.

A statement from Maj.-Gen. Iain Huddleston, commander of 1 Canadian Air Division, says the CT-114 Tutor jets will not fly until an airworthiness risk assessment can be completed.

The decision to ground the planes comes after a crash of one of the jets on Aug. 2 at the airport in Fort St. John, B.C.

No one was hurt when the pilot made a hard landing and the Air Force says the cause of the accident remains under investigation.

The Air Force statement says a deliberate, detailed and broad risk analysis will be done with the aim of ensuring the safe resumption of the squadron's flying operations.

It says the assessment will include whether the accident and its cause pose any risk to continued flying operations and what measures can be put in place to lower any risks.

“Given that the cause of this accident remains to be determined by the airworthiness investigative authority, I have ordered an operational pause on the CT-114 Tutor fleet as we continue the investigation and commence a thorough operational airworthiness risk assessment process," Huddleston said in the statement Wednesday.

The nearly 60-year-old Tutor jets are scheduled to be used by the Snowbirds until 2030.

MORE National ARTICLES

Liberals say faith in RCMP commissioner strong

Liberals say faith in RCMP commissioner strong
A report published Tuesday by the inquiry investigating the tragedy includes notes from an RCMP superintendent alleging Lucki said she had promised Blair and the Prime Minister's Office that information on the guns used by the shooter would be released as it affected pending gun control legislation.    

Liberals say faith in RCMP commissioner strong

Ex-employees sue Musk-run Tesla for mass layoffs

Ex-employees sue Musk-run Tesla for mass layoffs
The world's richest man said that the electric car-maker will cut salaries by 10 per cent over the next three months, as the company navigates the global macro-economic conditions. This would result in reducing Tesla's total headcount by roughly 3.5 per cent.

Ex-employees sue Musk-run Tesla for mass layoffs

Trucker Jaskirat Singh Sidhu deportation case could go to court for Broncos crash

Trucker Jaskirat Singh Sidhu deportation case could go to court for Broncos crash
The Canada Border Services Agency recommended in March that Jaskirat Singh Sidhu be handed over to the Immigration and Refugee Board to decide if he should be deported back to India.

Trucker Jaskirat Singh Sidhu deportation case could go to court for Broncos crash

Canadians confident in U.S., less in Biden: poll

Canadians confident in U.S., less in Biden: poll
In the Pew Research Center survey released Wednesday, only 61 per cent of Canadian respondents said they have confidence in President Joe Biden to do the right thing on the world stage — a steep decline from the 77 per cent who said the same thing in 2021.

Canadians confident in U.S., less in Biden: poll

Trudeau lands in Rwanda for Commonwealth summit

Trudeau lands in Rwanda for Commonwealth summit
Trudeau is in Kigali, the capital, where he will gather beginning Thursday with the heads of government from the other 53 countries in the Commonwealth for the first time since 2018.

Trudeau lands in Rwanda for Commonwealth summit

Hot spell for BC as of Friday, temps to spike into 30's

Hot spell for BC as of Friday, temps to spike into 30's
Special weather statements now cover the inner south coast, east to the Alberta boundary and north to Fort St. John, raising concerns that daytime heat and modest overnight cooling will rapidly melt still-heavy snowpacks, adding to flood risks.

Hot spell for BC as of Friday, temps to spike into 30's