Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

RCAF to test rapid rescue response time as new planes remain in limbo

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2015 01:51 PM
  • RCAF to test rapid rescue response time as new planes remain in limbo

OTTAWA — The air force is planning to test an expanded, more flexible response time for search and rescue along the East Coast in the coming year, even as long-delayed plans for new aircraft remain in a holding pattern.

National Defence has been quietly evaluating the merits of positioning its helicopters and fixed-wing planes to respond within 30 minutes of an emergency call, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

An around-the-clock half-hour response time is an idea the air force has long dismissed as too costly and manpower-intensive.

But in the wake of a harsh auditor general's report in the spring of 2013, National Defence began a series of assessments with different squadrons around the country, including bases in Trenton, Ont., Winnipeg, and Victoria, B.C.

Documents obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act show the evaluation will be expanded to Halifax this summer.

The Harper government was expected to issue a call for tenders last year in the decade-long program to buy new fixed-wing search planes, but that didn't happen, and a proposal is still months away.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists

Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists
OTTAWA — Canada's gross domestic product rose by an unexpectedly strong 0.3 per cent in October, which led several economists to consider revising their estimates for the final quarter of 2014 — although they also warned that they're less bullish about 2015 due to a drop in commodity prices, especially for oil.

Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists

Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections

Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections
EDMONTON — The former leader of the Reform Party says he made a mistake when he encouraged members of Alberta's Wildrose to unite with the governing Progressive Conservatives.

Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections

Fear of falsification prevents release of some electronic data: minister

Fear of falsification prevents release of some electronic data: minister
OTTAWA — The Conservative cabinet minister responsible for freedom of information says some federal data cannot be released to the public in electronic format because people might alter it and spread falsehoods.

Fear of falsification prevents release of some electronic data: minister

Co-owners of seniors' home drop lawsuit against Quebec town over fatal blaze

Co-owners of seniors' home drop lawsuit against Quebec town over fatal blaze
L'ISLE-VERTE, Que. — The Quebec town of L'Isle-Verte says the co-owners of a seniors' home where 32 people died in a blaze last January have dropped a lawsuit against the municipality.

Co-owners of seniors' home drop lawsuit against Quebec town over fatal blaze

Canadian teacher jailed in Indonesia devastated over outcome of related trial

Canadian teacher jailed in Indonesia devastated over outcome of related trial
JAKARTA, Indonesia — A Canadian teacher accused of sexually abusing three students at an international school in Indonesia found it "devastating" that five janitors also accused in the case were sentenced to up to eight years in prison, his family said Monday.

Canadian teacher jailed in Indonesia devastated over outcome of related trial

Hamilton man to face 4th trial in the 1981 murder of a young woman

Hamilton man to face 4th trial in the 1981 murder of a young woman
TORONTO — An Ontario man will be tried for a fourth time in September 2016 in the murder of a nursing assistant who was killed 33 years ago in the Hamilton area.

Hamilton man to face 4th trial in the 1981 murder of a young woman