Medicine Hat News

Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council seeks safety upgrade for B.C. harbour after crashes

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PORT ALBERNI, B.C.

The council that advocates for 14 First Nations on Vancouver Island is demanding Transport Canada review the laws, regulation­s and policies governing harbour activity in Tofino, B.C., after a second float plane crash in less than three months.

The Nuu-chah-nulth

Tribal Council says in a written statement that the situation is too grave to wait for possible Transporta­tion Safety Board recommenda­tions related to float plane accidents on Monday and on July 26th.

In Monday’s crash, a float plane with five people aboard flipped and began to sink after clipping a water taxi while landing, and the July crash involved a Cessna carrying five people that lost control on takeoff and overturned in shallow water.

All aboard in both events were rescued.

The safety board is investigat­ing the July crash and gathering informatio­n to determine if the latest event warrants a more detailed probe.

Both happened in a busy section of Tofino’s harbour that the tribal council says is travelled every day by many Nuu-chah-nulth people, and the council says regulation­s must be upgraded because they are “not sufficient” to prevent repeated occurrence­s.

Fishboats, water taxis, float planes and other vessels use the harbour, and tribal council vice president

Mariah Charleson says the airlines and Transport Canada must step up to ensure it remains safe for all users.

Tribal council president Judith Sayers was aboard the small plane that crashed in July and says she was trapped, upside down, with her head underwater. She believes she would have drowned if her son, who was also a passenger, had not pulled her out of the wreckage.

“Now the lives of two of our (tribal council) employees were endangered in this second accident,” Sayers says in the statement.

“We need changes now so no more lives are at risk.”

The tribal council statement praises the “selfless and heroic” actions of Ahousaht skipper Ken Brown, who responded to Monday’s crash and pulled most of those aboard to safety as the plane quickly filled with water.

“Understand­ing that the airlines and water taxis in Tofino are a vital service that connects many of our remote communitie­s to essential services, we cannot always rely on the heroics of local First Nations to respond to such tragic events (because they) may not be on the scene at the right time,” the statement says.

The Transporta­tion Safety Board website shows its investigat­ion of the July event is now in the report phase but it is ranked as a Class 4 investigat­ion, meaning the report will not contain findings or recommenda­tions.

The board is still deciding on its next steps following

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