The Peterborough Examiner

Tool bag caused copter crash

Warning issued over risks of unsecured cargo on helicopter­s

- PETER CAMERON THE CANADIAN PRESS

An improperly secured tool bag hit the rear rotor of a helicopter before the aircraft crashed near Tweed, killing four people on board, the Transporta­tion Safety Board said Thursday, as it issued a warning on the risks of unsecured cargo.

The board said its preliminar­y investigat­ion into the Dec. 14 crash near Tweed, about 95 kilometres east of Peterborou­gh, suggested the tool bag being carried on a platform outside the Hydro One helicopter was the main cause of the deadly incident.

Shortly before the crash, the helicopter’s pilot picked up three linemen at the base of a high-power transmissi­on tower and was transporti­ng them to a nearby staging area, the TSB said.

A few bags used for tools and supplies were being carried on the platform extending out of the right side of the helicopter. The bags are normally secured with double-lock carabiners, the TSB said.

“While nearing the staging area, one of the bags ... blew off the platform and along with its attached carabiner struck and damaged the tail rotor,” Peter Rowntree, a senior TSB investigat­or told reporters on Thursday.

“A heavily damaged carabiner, a damaged bag along with the tip of a tail rotor blade were found approximat­ely 600 metres away from the crash site.”

Investigat­ors also found that two of the three seatbelts in the helicopter’s passenger area were unfastened, Rowntree said.

“All three passengers became separated from the helicopter while it was still airborne,” he said.

Rowntree said the TSB investigat­ion into the crash continues and will examine helicopter maintenanc­e records, pilot training, operationa­l policies and previous occurrence­s involving the helicopter model involved.

Weather is not being considered a factor in the crash, he said.

The TSB issued a safety advisory Thursday in light of the crash, saying cargo must be adequately secured at all times and warning that passengers who don’t wear seat belts risk serious injury or death in an emergency.

The men killed in the crash were identified by Hydro One as 39-yearold James Baragar, 27-year-old Kyle Shorrock, and Jeff Howes and Darcy Jansen, both 26.

Hydro One has said Baragar, the pilot, was from Orillia and had been with the company since 2009.

Shorrock and Howes were from the Kingston area, while Jansen was from Long Sault, near Cornwall.

Greg Kiraly, Hydro One’s chief operating officer, said Thursday that the utility is treating the matter with “the utmost seriousnes­s.”

“We are pleased that the TSB has been able to release this preliminar­y informatio­n and we will be incorporat­ing today’s safety bulletin into our own review of our operating practices and procedures,” Kiraly said.

The helicopter did not have a cockpit voice recorder or a flight data recorder, but the TSB has said it recovered a GPS, which will help in the investigat­ion.

 ?? TRANSPORTA­TION SAFETY BOARD PHOTO ?? The wreckage of a helicopter is shown at the Transporta­tion Safety Board of Canada's lab in Ottawa. The Transporta­tion Safety Board says evidence suggests a tool bag being carried outside a Hydro One helicopter struck the rear rotor of the aircraft...
TRANSPORTA­TION SAFETY BOARD PHOTO The wreckage of a helicopter is shown at the Transporta­tion Safety Board of Canada's lab in Ottawa. The Transporta­tion Safety Board says evidence suggests a tool bag being carried outside a Hydro One helicopter struck the rear rotor of the aircraft...

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