Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2020 10:38 PM
  • Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Military investigators have revealed the sequence of events that led the Royal Canadian Air Force plane normally used by the prime minister to run into a tow tractor and hangar wall and suffer severe damage.

The crash at Canadian Forces Base Trenton in Ontario occurred last October and left the Airbus CC-150 Polaris known as "01" with structural damage to the nose and right engine that is still being repaired.

The timeline released Thursday — which reads like a comedy of errors — starts with contracted groundcrew with L3Harris towing the aircraft to a hangar "not routinely used" by the plane and too small for the tow tractor.

The maintenance crew set the plane's parking brake and put chocks on its wheels to keep it from rolling while they went to hook up a smaller tractor that would fit in the hangar, according to the report.

"During the tow tractor change, the aircraft started moving forward and jumped over the chocks," the report reads.

"Attempts to stop the aircraft by the tow crew were unsuccessful. The right engine struck the D-12 tow tractor parked inside the hangar before the nose contacted the hangar far wall structure, finally stopping the aircraft."

In addition to the damage to the plane, which the Department of National Defence has estimated at around $11 million, the investigators said one person received a minor injury.

Investigators could not say why the parking brake disengaged. But they did cite a lack of brake training as a cause for concern and said they found the chocks used to secure the plane did not meet standards and were not installed on all the wheels.

"The investigation recommends the use of approved chocks on all wheels and improved training for towing operations."

Officials previously said repairs on the aircraft would be finished by August, but that has been pushed back to January due to travel restrictions from COVID-19.

Defence Department spokesman Daniel Le Bouthillier said the government has asked L3Harris to repay the cost of the repairs "as the aircraft was in their care and custody when the accident occurred."

MORE National ARTICLES

Ceremony planned for service members killed in helicopter crash

Ceremony planned for service members killed in helicopter crash
The Canadian Armed Forces is planning to hold a ramp ceremony Wednesday to honour the six service members who went down with a military helicopter that crashed off the coast of Greece, even though the remains of five have not been recovered.

Ceremony planned for service members killed in helicopter crash

No more free ride on Metro Vancouver transit

No more free ride on Metro Vancouver transit
Transit users in Metro Vancouver will have to start paying bus fares again starting June 1. TransLink, the authority responsible for regional transportation, says fare collection and front-door boarding on buses will resume next month, although physical distancing measures to reduce the spread of COVID-19 remain in place.

No more free ride on Metro Vancouver transit

Media consortium seeking search warrants from Nova Scotia mass shooting

Media consortium seeking search warrants from Nova Scotia mass shooting
A provincial court judge says she'll push to hold hearings as quickly as possible on the public release of search warrants from the investigation into the recent mass shooting in Nova Scotia.

Media consortium seeking search warrants from Nova Scotia mass shooting

Parliament must be given more time to study COVID-19 response: Scheer

Parliament must be given more time to study COVID-19 response: Scheer
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says as provinces begin to ease up on COVID-19 restrictions, Parliament should also return to a more normal routine.A modified House of Commons is currently in session with MPs meeting three times a week, twice virtually and once in person, in the form of a special COVID-19 committee.

Parliament must be given more time to study COVID-19 response: Scheer

Trudeau takes part in COVID-19 virtual pledging conference led by EU

Trudeau takes part in COVID-19 virtual pledging conference led by EU
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has taken part in an international pledging conference sponsored by the European Union to raise more than $11 billion for long-term COVID-19 vaccine research.

Trudeau takes part in COVID-19 virtual pledging conference led by EU

Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low

Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low
The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home sales dropped by 39.4 per cent in April from a year earlier to hit an almost four-decade low.

Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low