Times Colonist

It wasn’t feces that fell from sky, agency declares

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VANCOUVER — Transport Canada says a substance that fell from the sky and onto vehicles and people in two B.C. communitie­s was not human feces from aircraft, but one woman believes the foulsmelli­ng material that landed in her eyes had to be excrement.

The department has been investigat­ing reports last month of frozen lavatory waste, called “blue ice,” possibly falling from planes in Kelowna and Abbotsford.

It said in a statement that staff have reviewed details provided by the public, assessed local radar data and followed up with aircraft operators and local airports to conclude that the substance did not come from passing planes.

“The department’s review has concluded that these incidents do not meet the descriptio­n of blue ice and are, therefore, not aviation-related.”

Blue-ice incidents are rare and are so named because of a distinct blue liquid used to disinfect human waste from washrooms in an aircraft’s holding tank, which could leak before the frozen material melts and falls off the plane, the statement said.

Susan Allan, 53, said she can’t believe the smelly bluish-grey substance that fell into her eyes from the open sunroof of her car on May 9 wasn’t human excrement. It also fell onto her 21-year-old son Travis Sweet’s face, who was a passenger in the vehicle in Kelowna and described the substance as “freezing cold,” she said.

Allan said she was diagnosed with conjunctiv­itis in both eyes and was prescribed eye drops.

What appeared to be excrement also fell on a red car near her, Allan said, adding she and her son went to a car wash to spray themselves off before she called the airport and was told Transport Canada would look into what happened.

“It was a beautiful day, it was pure blue sky and if I had looked up and seen a flock of birds it would have been a different story. All that was there was an airplane and by the time we looked up it was already going over top of the golf course,” she said.

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