Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Engine failure, bucket led to deadly helicopter crash during Alberta wildfire: TSB

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Feb, 2025 12:51 PM
  • Engine failure, bucket led to deadly helicopter crash during Alberta wildfire: TSB

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada says engine failure less than a minute into a flight contributed to a deadly helicopter crash during a 2023 wildfire in northern Alberta.

It says the helicopter's pilot had been tapped to help with firefighting efforts in the Peace River region and took off with an empty water bucket suspended from a 45-metre line.

Soon after, the pilot reported a mechanical issue, prompting him to turn around and return to base.

The board's investigation found the bucket hanging from the helicopter got caught in trees during its descent.

Although the pilot was able to disconnect the line, it caused him to lose full control of the aircraft and it went nose-down into the ground.

The pilot for Valhalla Helicopters Inc, identified as 41-year-old Ryan Gould of Whitecourt, Alta., survived the impact but later died of his injuries.

The board says investigators found a defect in the engine had worn on it over time and led to its failure.

Eight wildfire fighters died in the summer of 2023, a year in which the total area burned in Canada eclipsed the previous record by more than 2 1/2 times.

MORE National ARTICLES

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces
Permanent residents can now apply to join the Canadian Armed Forces, regardless of whether they have been trained by a foreign military. It's the latest effort by Canada's military to boost recruitment numbers, which are lagging well behind the target of adding 5,900 new members by March.

Permanent residents can apply to join Armed Forces

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report
Safeguard Defenders - a not-for-profit human rights group - says two of the new locations are in Canada: one in Vancouver and the second unknown. The group's previous report alleges employees from the overseas police system use intimidation and threats to enforce the “involuntary" return of immigrants back to China for persecution.

Vancouver has Chinese ‘police station’: report

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says after two years of low rates of flu, mostly due to travel restrictions, the province is seeing a "dramatic increase" in illness and it arrived sooner than normal.

B.C. urges flu vaccines for children as cases rise

BC Assessment warns values up but not current

BC Assessment warns values up but not current
BC Assessment says in a statement that most owners can expect to see a five to 15 per cent rise in values when notices are issued Jan. 3. However, it says those figures are based on the real estate market as of July 1, 2022, and conditions have changed.  

BC Assessment warns values up but not current

Delta, B.C., mayor wants road snow removal review

Delta, B.C., mayor wants road snow removal review
Delta Mayor George Harvie says some drivers from Delta were stranded in their cars for up to 10 hours, while those in other parts of the region have told media that 45-minute commutes turned into 12 hours of gridlock.

Delta, B.C., mayor wants road snow removal review

Railtown man allegedly shoots a gun inside his apartment, neighbours evacuated: VPD

Railtown man allegedly shoots a gun inside his apartment, neighbours evacuated: VPD
A person who was with the man when he began firing quickly fled and called 9-1-1, reporting that the shooter had been acting strangely for several days. VPD officers surrounded the building and evacuated neighbours who were in harm’s way so they could begin communicating with the suspect.

Railtown man allegedly shoots a gun inside his apartment, neighbours evacuated: VPD