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

Feds to move on assault-style rifle ban

Feds to move on assault-style rifle ban
The federal government is poised to ban a variety of assault-style rifles, including the type used in the 1989 Montreal Massacre. During the fall election campaign, the Liberals said guns designed to inflict mass human casualties have no place in Canada.    

Feds to move on assault-style rifle ban

B.C. defers stumpage fees to aid forest industry during pandemic

B.C. defers stumpage fees to aid forest industry during pandemic
Premier John Horgan says in a news release the government will defer stumpage fees for the next three months to help forest companies with their financial liquidity during the crisis. Stumpage is the fee forest operators pay the province to harvest, buy or sell trees from Crown land.

B.C. defers stumpage fees to aid forest industry during pandemic

'Suspected' explosive device detonated after traffic stop: Vancouver police

'Suspected' explosive device detonated after traffic stop: Vancouver police
A traffic stop by Vancouver police led to a device being detonated by the bomb squad on Tuesday. The incident began when a suspect was pulled over in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside and officers noticed what appeared to be fentanyl in his car.

'Suspected' explosive device detonated after traffic stop: Vancouver police

Snowbirds to boost morale amid COVID-19 with cross-country tour

Snowbirds to boost morale amid COVID-19 with cross-country tour
The Canadian Armed Forces is deploying its famed Snowbirds aerobatics team on a cross-country tour aimed at boosting morale as Canadians continue to struggle with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Snowbirds to boost morale amid COVID-19 with cross-country tour

Provinces, regions weigh different COVID-19 factors on reopening: PM

Provinces, regions weigh different COVID-19 factors on reopening: PM
As some provinces considered staggered steps Wednesday towards reopening their economies, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made clear some of them may ease restrictions at different speeds.

Provinces, regions weigh different COVID-19 factors on reopening: PM

More than half of Canadian companies see sales drop at least 20%: StatCan

More than half of Canadian companies see sales drop at least 20%: StatCan
Almost one-third of businesses could stay open if physical distancing rules remain in place for six months, but nearly as many suggest they won't survive that long, according to survey results from Statistics Canada that provide a window into the financial strain of anti-pandemic rules on companies large and small.

More than half of Canadian companies see sales drop at least 20%: StatCan