Wednesday, July 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Snowbird jets take off from B.C. after grounding

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2020 10:18 PM
  • Snowbird jets take off from B.C. after grounding

A pair of Snowbird jets took off from Kamloops, B.C., Tuesday, more than three months after a fatal crash near the city's airport.

The jets were given approval last week to head to their home base in Moose Jaw, Sask., after being grounded because of the crash on May 17.

Capt. Jennifer Casey, the team's public affairs officer, was killed, while pilot Capt. Richard MacDougall was seriously hurt.

It's believed the plane went down shortly after hitting a bird while taking off from the airport, crashing in a Kamloops neighbourhood.

Lt.-Col. Denis Bandet, the Snowbirds' commanding officer, says the team intends to return to Kamloops next week to get the rest of the planes.

Bandet says the Snowbirds will be forever grateful to the residents of Kamloops for their support during a difficult time.

He says MacDougall is recovering from his injuries and getting the best care from the medical staff at 15 Wing in Moose Jaw.

When the Royal Canadian Air Force announced the Tutor jets were allowed back into the air on Aug. 24, it also said there would be new restrictions for the aerobatics team.

The crash in May was the second in less than eight months and came after another jet went down in Georgia last October. A report released in June said a parachute became tangled in the ejection seat, leaving the pilot with minor injuries.

Similar concerns were raised by investigators in the May crash, which remains under investigation.

Col. Ron Walker, commander of 15 Wing Moose Jaw, said last week that next season will look different for spectators, with new restrictions on the jets' minimum flying height and speed.

MORE National ARTICLES

Two Teens Thought To Be Missing Now Suspects In Three Northern B.C. Deaths

SURREY, B.C. - A nationwide manhunt was on Tuesday for two teenagers labelled by police as suspects in the deaths of three people in northern British Columbia.

Two Teens Thought To Be Missing Now Suspects In Three Northern B.C. Deaths

Canada Invests $85M Into Advanced Satellites To Connect Rural, Remote Regions

The funding is to help Ottawa-based Telesat develop a group of co-ordinated satellites — also known as a constellation — in low Earth orbit.

Canada Invests $85M Into Advanced Satellites To Connect Rural, Remote Regions

B.C. Coroner's Jury Wants More High-Tech Equipment For Emergency Response Police

B.C. Coroner's Jury Wants More High-Tech Equipment For Emergency Response Police
A British Columbia coroner's jury has recommended that there be more officers on the north district emergency response team and that they be better equipped after a police shooting death of a man five years ago.

B.C. Coroner's Jury Wants More High-Tech Equipment For Emergency Response Police

Woman Walking In Newton Athletic Park Grabbed From Behind: Surrey RCMP Release Sketches Of Sexual Assault Suspect

Surrey RCMP have released sketches of a man wanted for the sexual assault of a woman in Newton Athletic Park on July 9.

Woman Walking In Newton Athletic Park Grabbed From Behind: Surrey RCMP Release Sketches Of Sexual Assault Suspect

Two Port Coquitlam Teens Arrested In Connection With Little Library Fires

Tips from the public have helped identify two teenage male suspects after a series of fires to community book exchange boxes known as Little Libraries.

Two Port Coquitlam Teens Arrested In Connection With Little Library Fires

Abbotsford Major Crimes Unit Investigating Suspicious Fire At Townhouse

Abbotsford Emergency Services responded to a townhouse complex fire this morning, just before 2:00 am, in the 33000 block of Lynn Ave.  Fire crews extinguished a fire that affected 3 townhouses

Abbotsford Major Crimes Unit Investigating Suspicious Fire At Townhouse