Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2025 05:00 PM
  • Plane was in training spin when it crashed, killing instructor and student: report

A report says a plane was doing a training spin at a lower-than-recommended altitude when it went down in a lake near Edmonton, killing a flight instructor and a student pilot.

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada says the plane was working properly and the weather was fine when it crashed in August 2023.

The student was on his 13th training flight when the plane took off from the Cooking Lake Aerodrome and crashed in Beaverhill Lake.

A search team found the wreckage after several hours, along with the body of the instructor, and the student died two days later of his injuries.

The report says the plane successfully pulled out of a deliberate first spin but, for unknown reasons, didn't recover from the second.

It says the last manoeuvre started at a lower elevation of 2,531 feet above ground level instead of 4,000 feet, which is standard practice for a training flight.

"While a spin from this height should have been recoverable, neither the student pilot nor the flight instructor was able to effect a recovery. The investigation was unable to determine the reason," said the report released Wednesday.

It said the Cooking Lake Aviation Academy has since revised its flight operations manual to formalize minimum altitudes for upper-air work and spins.

Diamond Aircraft Industries Inc. has also highlighted safety issues with its DA20-C1. The report says an emergency locator transmitter didn't activate when the plane crashed and that it's believed a wire on the device was not installed during assembly.

"Consequently, search and rescue efforts to reach the accident site were delayed," said the report.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C.'s new cabinet to be sworn in Nov. 18 after this week's judicial recounts

B.C.'s new cabinet to be sworn in Nov. 18 after this week's judicial recounts
British Columbia's new cabinet is expected to be sworn in on Nov. 18, almost a month after the provincial election that gave Premier David Eby's New Democrats the slimmest of majorities, pending recounts.

B.C.'s new cabinet to be sworn in Nov. 18 after this week's judicial recounts

Tunnel under Stanley Park coming

Tunnel under Stanley Park coming
The Metro Vancouver regional district says construction will begin this month on a new 1.4-kilometre-long water supply tunnel deep under Stanley Park. A statement from the district says the tunnel will replace a water main that was built in the 1930s with work expected to stretch into 2029.

Tunnel under Stanley Park coming

B.C. business groups urge end to port lockout as labour dispute halts shipping

B.C. business groups urge end to port lockout as labour dispute halts shipping
British Columbia's businesses leaders are urging port employers and more than 700 unionized workers to resolve their dispute immediately as a lockdown paralyzes shipping along Canada's west coast. The BC Maritime Employers Association says no negotiations are scheduled a day after it launched what it calls a defensive lockout against members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514.

B.C. business groups urge end to port lockout as labour dispute halts shipping

Eby wants all-party probe into B.C. vote count errors as election boss blames weather

Eby wants all-party probe into B.C. vote count errors as election boss blames weather
Premier David Eby is proposing an all-party committee investigate mistakes made during the British Columbia election vote tally, including an uncounted ballot box and unreported votes in three-quarters of the province's 93 ridings. The proposal comes after B.C.'s chief electoral officer blamed extreme weather, long working hours and a new voting system for human errors behind the mistakes in last month's count, though none were large enough to change the initial results.

Eby wants all-party probe into B.C. vote count errors as election boss blames weather

'It feels very bad': Brampton reels after two nights of tense protest outside temple

'It feels very bad': Brampton reels after two nights of tense protest outside temple
Monday night saw hundreds of demonstrators gather outside the Hindu Sabha Mandir in Brampton, Ont., where police allege people in the crowd were carrying weapons and objects were being thrown.  That demonstration came after violent protests on Sunday outside the same temple spilled over to two other locations in Mississauga, Ont. 

'It feels very bad': Brampton reels after two nights of tense protest outside temple

Fatal crash on Vancouver Island

Fatal crash on Vancouver Island
Police say they're investigating a head-on crash that killed one person on Vancouver Island over the weekend. R-C-M-P say witnesses to the crash on Highway 18 west of Duncan told police that a compact pickup truck was heading west when it drifted into the oncoming lane and struck a one-tonne pickup.

Fatal crash on Vancouver Island