Close X
Wednesday, October 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Threats Against Westjet Flight Exposed Holes In Information Sharing, Feds Told

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2015 07:57 PM
  • Threats Against Westjet Flight Exposed Holes In Information Sharing, Feds Told
OTTAWA — A spate of bomb threats against Canadian airlines over the summer exposed what one airport executive believed were shortcomings in how the industry and federal government share information about threats, newly released documents show.
 
The sentiment, expressed in an email from the head of the Winnipeg Airports Authority to Transport Canada's then-deputy minister, came after five bomb threats in six days against WestJet flights — all of which turned out to be hoaxes.
 
A copy of the message and other documents related to the bomb threats were released to The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.
 
Each incident, wrote authority head Barry Rempel, showed information sharing between the industry and federal agencies was "not timely nor sufficiently robust" for an effective response "and to track down the perpetrator(s)."
 
To date, no one has been charged in connection with the threats, which were made in late June and early July.
 
RCMP spokeswoman Sgt. Julie Gagnon said the force is still co-ordinating investigations by local and provincial forces.
 
WestJet spokesman Robert Palmer said the airline continues to work with authorities to find out who was behind the threats, which forced two flights to land early and put a scare into passengers during the summer travel season.
 
A Vancouver-Toronto flight had to land in Calgary on Canada Day, while a Halifax-Edmonton flight had to land in Saskatoon. Two other flights landed at their destinations in Victoria and Saskatoon after threats were called in.
 
In one case, six passengers received minor injuries after a bomb threat forced an Edmonton-Toronto WestJet flight to land in Winnipeg.
 
After the last threat on July 2, Transport Canada sent out a security reminder to airlines and airports about how they were supposed to handle bomb threats, given the increased frequency of such threats in Canada and the United States. The notice said airlines had to figure out if the threat was legitimate, and then decide with local police and, if necessary, Transport Canada how to deal with it.
 
In his email, Rempel wrote that Transport Canada and NORAD, among others, needed to be more involved each time a passenger plane was threatened.
 
"If airports or even other agencies are going to be receiving these calls, I believe they should all be treated as serious, but that people within the intelligence community are well positioned to assist," Rempel wrote in the July 2 email.
 
He argued the RCMP should take the lead on tracking down perpetrators, which it did after the fifth threat, and not let investigations drop, which usually "falls to the bottom of their daily priorities."
 
Rempel declined to comment on his message, sent in the early hours of July 2, nor on what movement — if any — there has been on his suggestions.
 
Transport Canada didn't say whether it has made or recommended any changes along the lines of what Rempel suggested. Spokeswoman Natasha Gauthier said the department works with police, airlines and airports "to resolve threat situations safely, efficiently, and with least possible impact to passengers and the aviation system."
 
Gauthier said any found responsible for the threats "will face the full force of the law."

MORE National ARTICLES

As Many As 60 Hurt, One Seriously In Bus, Car Collision On Highway 1 In B.C.

As Many As 60 Hurt, One Seriously In Bus, Car Collision On Highway 1 In B.C.
The accident between the bus and a car happened about 4 p.m. Friday, at the start of a holiday long-weekend.

As Many As 60 Hurt, One Seriously In Bus, Car Collision On Highway 1 In B.C.

City Of Abbotsford Used Pepper Spray And Manure Tactics To Evict Homeless: Lawyer

City Of Abbotsford Used Pepper Spray And Manure Tactics To Evict Homeless: Lawyer
Pivot Legal Society lawyer David Wotherspoon told a B.C. Supreme Court judge that the homeless have been pepper sprayed by police and had chicken manure dumped on their campsite

City Of Abbotsford Used Pepper Spray And Manure Tactics To Evict Homeless: Lawyer

Nandini Jha, Mississauga Mom Convicted Of Killing Her 3-Year-Old Daughter Gets 10 Years In Jail

Nandini Jha, Mississauga Mom Convicted Of Killing Her 3-Year-Old Daughter Gets 10 Years In Jail
Crown lawyers alleged that Jha beat her daughter over many weeks, culminating in a final fatal attack.

Nandini Jha, Mississauga Mom Convicted Of Killing Her 3-Year-Old Daughter Gets 10 Years In Jail

Third Day Of Deliberations At Inquest Examining Deadly Blast In Burns Lake, B.C.

Third Day Of Deliberations At Inquest Examining Deadly Blast In Burns Lake, B.C.
Forty-five-year-old Robert Luggi and 42-year-old Carl Charlie died in the Jan. 20, 2012 blast that seriously injured 19 others and destroyed Babine Forest Products near Burns Lake

Third Day Of Deliberations At Inquest Examining Deadly Blast In Burns Lake, B.C.

Wife Of Dead Officer Says RCMP Made Her Husband 'Scapegoat' In Robert Dziekanski Death

The wife of an RCMP officer who killed himself two years ago claims that her husband was used by the Mounties a scapegoat in the death of Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver's airport in October 2007.

Wife Of Dead Officer Says RCMP Made Her Husband 'Scapegoat' In Robert Dziekanski Death

Jim Chu, Vancouver's Former Chief Constable Joins High Profile Private Sector Firm

Chu has joined the Aquilini Investment Group (AIG) as vice president of special projects and partnerships.

Jim Chu, Vancouver's Former Chief Constable Joins High Profile Private Sector Firm