Lethbridge Herald

Plane problem came quick

NO FATALITIES AFTER PLANE WITH 25 ABOARD CRASHES IN SASK.

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One of the survivors of a plane crash in northern Saskatchew­an says he knew something was wrong about 10 seconds after takeoff.

“The plane was just moving up and down, side by side,” said Willie John Laurent, a band councillor with the Fond du Lac Dene Nation who was on the plane. “The last I remember is it touching the ground. That’s the last I know.”

Laurent, his wife Helen and their daughter Amanda were among the 22 passengers — including an infant — and three crew members aboard a West Wind Aviation turboprop that crashed Wednesday around 6:15 p.m. near the remote community of Fond du Lac in the boreal forest area of northern Saskatchew­an.

It was scheduled to travel 80 kilometres east to Stony Rapids, then on to Wollaston and Prince Albert.

No one was killed in the crash. At least five people were seriously injured and needed to be airlifted to hospital.

Darryl McDonald said his 70-yearold mother, Ernestine, suffered a broken jaw and facial injuries when the plane went down about a kilometre from the airstrip. His sister also suffered injuries to her leg.

Laurent, who was bruised on one side of his body, remembers hearing screaming as the plane went down.

“People yelling, yelling, yelling,” he said. “Then you smell a lot of fuel, a lot of jet fuel. Good thing there was no spark.”

A photo of the crash site shows the damaged aircraft partly on its side in the trees, with a wing jutting up in the air at a 45-degree angle. The cause of the crash isn’t known yet.

It took about four hours to rescue all the passengers and crew from the plane. Local RCMP officers, rangers and at least 50 residents in the 900person community immediatel­y went to the scene to help.

Chris Fountain, a civilian guard at the RCMP detachment, was playing radio bingo when he called his work to see if he needed to go in.

“I actually got Regina telecoms and they told me that the members are really busy, there’s been a plane crash. So I just hung up the phone and went for a ride.”

Fountain jumped on his snowmobile, driving about four minutes into the bush to find the plane and help with the rescue.

“You could smell fuel so, of course, we made sure everybody’s cellphone was shut off and nobody was smoking,” he said.

“We took the ones that were in shock and jumped on Ski-Doos behind people or in front of people and we pulled them out. The rest were on stretcher boards and we sleighed them out up to the road.

“Then the ambulance or whatever nursing station vehicles were there to haul the ones coming off on stretchers out.”

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