Saskatoon StarPhoenix

ABORTED FLIGHT WAS ‘TERRIFYING’ PASSENGERS SAY.

- TOM BLACKWELL tblackwell@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/tomblackwe­llNP

Passengers on board an Air Canada flight from Antigua to Toronto are demanding answers after a series of mishaps — including a “terrifying” aborted takeoff and an emergency landing — left some wondering if they would finish the trip alive.

They say the captain explained he stopped the plane just before going airborne because he neglected to activate an on-board computer.

The emergency landing was blamed on faulty fuel distributi­on, similar to a problem the crew addressed before they left Antigua.

Passengers question whether the Airbus A319 should have taken off at all on June 3 after its earlier troubles.

“It was the absolute worst and most terrifying flight experience I’ve ever had,” said 33-year-old Toronto-based Internet entreprene­ur Dan Fuller. “There were too many incidents that were occurring back to back to back to think everything was done by the book.”

Air Canada says the aborted takeoff, while rare, was at the relatively low speed of 80 knots — well within safety parameters — and the plane had no known safety issues when it eventually left the Caribbean island.

Though it had no staff on the ground in Puerto Rico, site of the emergency landing, the airline arranged hotels and meals for passengers before flying them to Toronto the next day, spokesman Peter Fitzpatric­k said.

“Still, this was an understand­ably disappoint­ing experience for our customers,” he said. “Our crews are trained to behave profession­ally and operate safely at all times and they did follow safety protocols. We are sorry about this experience … We have offered significan­t compensati­on.”

Fuller said he was promised a debriefing with an Air Canada customer-service representa­tive and also emailed an array of company executives asking for a full explanatio­n of the flight’s troubles, but has yet to hear from any of them.

He said he’s been offered a $500 credit on future travel.

According to passengers, Flight 961 was meant to leave about 2:30 p.m. from Antigua’s V.C. Bird Internatio­nal Airport but a series of delays ensued, starting with a malfunctio­ning toilet. As the Airbus finally taxied toward the runway, it was ordered back by air traffic controller­s because of a storm.

Given the go-ahead later, the jet was hurtling down the runway when the takeoff was aborted, smoke billowing from the landing gear.

“He slammed on the brakes. It was terrifying,” said Fuller, who was on vacation with his wife. “A lot of us felt this would be the end for us.”

Fitzpatric­k said the incident stemmed from a “flight computer setting.”

Both Fuller and fellow passenger Stella Mercuri, a Montreal medical secretary also on holiday, said the captain announced he made an error with the computer.

The passengers next heard about a problem with the distributi­on of the fuel, but about four hours after the scheduled departure time, 961 took off successful­ly. In the air, crew offered passengers only small amounts of water each, Fuller said, despite their long wait on the tarmac.

Just over an hour into the flight, the pilot announced the emergency landing in Puerto Rico.

“Everybody panicked,” Mercuri said. “We were all pretty much freaking out … I just felt that all this would have been avoided if they had just stayed in Antigua.”

Though the Transporta­tion Safety Board is not investigat­ing the incident, it issued a report saying the crew decided to land after noticing the engines were only getting fuel from the left and centre tanks, not the right, creating an imbalance.

As they were about to board the replacemen­t flight the next day, Fuller said he approached the captain to ask for an explanatio­n of all that happened. Citing his 30 years of cockpit experience, the pilot said things could have ended much differentl­y, the passenger recounted.

“He said, ‘If you were on an aircraft with another carrier or you had a less experience­d flight crew, you might not be alive today.’”

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