Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Two Hurt In Mid-Flight As Porter Airlines Plane Evades Possible Drone

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Nov, 2016 01:38 PM
  • Two Hurt In Mid-Flight As Porter Airlines Plane Evades Possible Drone
TORONTO — Two crew members of a Porter Airlines flight en route from Ottawa to Toronto were slightly hurt Monday when a plane narrowly avoided a mid-flight collision with what may have been a drone, the airline said.
 
The Dash 8 aircraft with 54 passengers was flying at just under 3,000 metres over Lake Ontario at 7:30 a.m. E.T. and was about 55 kilometres from Toronto's island airport when the incident occurred.
 
"The pilots noticed an object in the distance (and) as they approached the object, they realized it was very close to their flight path," Porter Airlines said in a statement.
 
"The pilots' initial assessment was that it looked like a balloon. After debriefing, there is potential that the object was drone."
 
The pilots took evasive action and, contrary to some initial reports, there was no contact between the aircraft and object.
 
The two flight attendants, who were in the process of securing the cabin for landing and weren't in their seats, were pitched about the cabin, but continued with their duties.
 
No passengers were hurt and the plane landed normally. The flight attendants were taken to hospital as a precaution and released.
 
A senior investigator with the Transportation Safety Board of Canada told The Canadian Press that it was impossible to say at this point what the unidentified object was.
 
"It happened so quick, they have no idea what it was. It's just something that they knew they were going to hit unless they took evasive action," Peter Rowntree said. "It happened that quickly."
 
Rowntree said the aircraft ducked under the object but could not say exactly how far the plane dived. He did, however, say the encounter was "very close."
 
Investigators have taken cockpit voice records and the flight-data recorder for analysis and to see how much the aircraft descended during its "very quick evasive action," he said.
 
"We may never be able to determine what exactly they saw," Rowntree said. 
 
The growing threat of collisions with drones prompted Transport Canada in September to warn those flying them about the potential hazards they presented.
 
"Before you take to the skies, make sure you understand the rules and follow them," the agency says on its website. "Not doing so could put lives at risk and cost you up to $25,000 in fines and/or jail time."
 
While flying drones under 35 kilograms requires no special permit, users must stay away from flying within nine kilometres of an airport or helicopter landing pad and no higher than 90 metres.
 
Porter operates flights out of Toronto's island airport to and from several Ontario cities, as well as to seven destinations in the U.S.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Premier Tours Fish Market To Highlight Support For Trans-Pacific Trade Deal

VICTORIA — B.C. Premier Christy Clark expressed her support for the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal during a visit Wednesday to a fish market.

B.C. Premier Tours Fish Market To Highlight Support For Trans-Pacific Trade Deal

Despite Lie Allegation, Modi Says Mother Washed Utensils

Despite Lie Allegation, Modi Says Mother Washed Utensils
Notwithstanding strong criticism by the Congress which termed it a "lie", Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday stuck to his September 2015 remark that his mother used to wash utensils in other people's homes.

Despite Lie Allegation, Modi Says Mother Washed Utensils

Canada To Host El Salvador In Crucial World Cup Qualifier At B.C. Place

Canada To Host El Salvador In Crucial World Cup Qualifier At B.C. Place
VANCOUVER — The Canadian men's soccer team is returning to B.C. Place Stadium.

Canada To Host El Salvador In Crucial World Cup Qualifier At B.C. Place

Supreme Court Rules That Metis, Non-status Indians Are Federal Responsibility

Supreme Court Rules That Metis, Non-status Indians Are Federal Responsibility
Canada's 600,000 Metis and non-status Indians are indeed "Indians" under the Constitution, the Supreme Court of Canada declared Thursday in a long-awaited landmark decision more than 15 years in the making.

Supreme Court Rules That Metis, Non-status Indians Are Federal Responsibility

No Definitive Cause Of Death For Male Killer Whale Found Off Vancouver Island

TAHSIS, B.C. — The Department of Fisheries and Oceans says a necropsy performed on a killer whale found floating in a Vancouver Island inlet suggests no clear cause of death.

No Definitive Cause Of Death For Male Killer Whale Found Off Vancouver Island

B.C. Mountie Acquitted More Than Six Years After Aggravated Assault Charges

B.C. Mountie Acquitted More Than Six Years After Aggravated Assault Charges
NANAIMO, B.C. — An RCMP officer on Vancouver Island has been acquitted of aggravated assault at his second trial.

B.C. Mountie Acquitted More Than Six Years After Aggravated Assault Charges