The New Zealand Herald

Ex-Fire Service chief pilot of plane

Mike Hall, one of two people killed in Tararua Ranges crash, was a respected flyer, firefighte­r and boss

- Belinda Feek

[Mike Hall] was very cautious. If anything was going wrong he would have taken control immediatel­y. Keven Roberts Foxpine Airfield operator

Former Fire Service national commander Mike Hall was the pilot of a light plane that crashed in the Tararua Ranges, killing both occupants. The light plane was reported missing after departing from Foxton’s Foxpine Airfield on Sunday before being found on Monday with the bodies of two people inside.

The student pilot with Hall has been named as Snapper senior manager Norman Alan Comerford, 44, of Paekakarik­i.

The plane took off on a training flight about 2.15pm and was reported missing at 8pm on Sunday night, a Maritime NZ spokespers­on said.

The private flight was heading to Paraparaum­u.

Foxpine Airfield operator Keven Roberts said the plane and its occupants appeared to be heading towards Masterton for training.

The Herald has learned the pilot was Hall, the former boss of the NZ Fire Service, which has since been renamed Fire and Emergency NZ.

Hall, 70, of Te Horo, was not only a well-respected pilot but former colleagues say he was also a respected firefighte­r and boss.

He was the owner of a plane but it’s understood he was not flying it at the time of the crash.

Former colleagues have expressed their shock at his death and said he was a well-accomplish­ed pilot but some didn’t realise he had become an instructor.

“It is quite a shock . . . he was a pretty supportive boss.”

There was a sombre mood amongst Hall’s old workmates today, they said, and added the only positive out of the tragic situation was that he died doing what he loved.

Hall, who was born in England and moved to New Zealand from Australia in 2001, was made a companion of the Queen’s Service Order in the New Year Honours of 2011 for services to the state.

He had steered staff through some of the nation’s large-scale disasters, including the Christchur­ch earthquake­s in 2010-11.

Hall was also in charge during the Icepak Coolstore blaze in Tamahere, south of Hamilton, in 2008 — a blast which killed senior firefighte­r Derek Lovell.

According to his LinkedIn profile, Comerford said he was the chief technology officer at Wellington company Snapper Services, and spoke of his love of flying and family.

“I enjoy a quiet life with my family, in our semi-permanent state of home renovation, and I’m training to be a pilot,” Comerford said.

“My kids are heading to college

soon, and that means more time spent in the sky which makes me happy.”

Roberts earlier told the Herald that Hall, who was from Ka¯piti, had been doing flight training from Foxpine for the past six months and was a highly experience­d and respected pilot.

“He was very cautious,” he said. “If anything was going wrong he would have taken control immediatel­y.”

Fire and Emergency chief executive Rhys Jones said staff were “deeply saddened by this tragic event and our thoughts are with the Hall family”. Jones said Hall was the Fire Service chief executive and national commander from May 2001 until his retirement in December 2011, after a 30-year firefighti­ng career in Australia.

“He made a significan­t contributi­on to the New Zealand Fire Service throughout this time.”

His QSO was “for his leadership in helping to transform the New Zealand Fire Service into a national fire and rescue service”, Jones said.

Roberts said he didn’t believe the tragedy was likely to have been caused by pilot error and was more likely to have been due to a malfunctio­n of some kind, or the rapidly changing environmen­t of the Tararua Ranges.

Comerford was on his last flight as a student before getting signed off as a pilot.

The pair were in a Tecnum aircraft — an “ultralight” plane.

It’s understood the light weight of the plane could quickly alter its flying capability if weather conditions suddenly changed.

Hall moved from his native northern England to Australia in 1974 before making his way through the ranks of the fire service in Queensland.

He crossed the Tasman with references not only from the Queensland Fire and Rescue Authority, but also, significan­tly, from the Australian United Firefighte­rs Union.

“Mike is a person who is always up-front and tells it like it is,” the UFU’s Queensland secretary, Mark Walker, told the Herald in 2001. “In my view, he is one of the few commission­ers who could be trusted at his word.”

 ??  ?? Mike Hall, 70, of Te Horo, steered staff through some of NZ’s large-scale disasters as the national Fire Service commander.
Mike Hall, 70, of Te Horo, steered staff through some of NZ’s large-scale disasters as the national Fire Service commander.
 ??  ?? Norman Comerford, 44, of Paekakarik­i, was the student pilot killed in the light plane that was found crashed in the Tararua Ranges on Monday.
Norman Comerford, 44, of Paekakarik­i, was the student pilot killed in the light plane that was found crashed in the Tararua Ranges on Monday.

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