The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Hawaii tour helicopter crash kills 6; 1 missing

- By Caleb Jones

HONOLULU >> A person is still missing after six others were killed in a Hawaii tour helicopter crash and U.S. Rep. Ed Case called Saturday for greater regulation in the industry.

“Tour helicopter and small aircraft operations are not safe, and innocent lives are paying the price,” Case said.

The helicopter was set to tour the rugged and remote Kauai’s Na Pali Coast, which is one of the most dramatic and sought-after destinatio­ns in Hawaii and was featured in the film “Jurassic Park.” The aircraft crashed at the top of a mountain on the island of Kauai, authoritie­s said.

There are no indication­s that anybody survived the crash, authoritie­s said Friday night after the remains of six of the people on board were found. Authoritie­s have not named those on board and said families are being notified.

A search began for the helicopter carrying a pilot and six passengers from two families after it was reported overdue Thursday evening. Two passengers are believed to be minors, the Coast Guard said.

Steep terrain, low visibility, choppy seas and rain had complicate­d the search, the agency said.

The helicopter company, identified as Safari Helicopter­s, contacted the Coast Guard about 6 p.m. Thursday to say the aircraft was about 30 minutes overdue, authoritie­s said.

A person who answered the phone at a number listed for Safari Helicopter­s declined to comment and hung up.

According to a preliminar­y report, the pilot said the tour was leaving the Waimea Canyon area, known as the “Grand Canyon of the Pacific,” about 4:40 p.m., which was the last contact with the helicopter, Kauai police said.

The Eurocopter AS350 has an emergency electronic locator transmitte­r, but no signals were received. The locator devices are designed to activate when an aircraft crashes, Federal Aviation Administra­tion spokesman Ian Gregor said in an email.

The FAA requires the locators to be able to withstand impact. However, it is possible for the device to stop working in an extreme crash, Gregor said.

He said the agency is looking at the company’s safety record but likely won’t have a full report until Monday. It’s looking into the crash along with the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, which announced Friday that it was sending three investigat­ors to Kauai.

U.S. Rep. Ed Case of Hawaii cited fatal accidents over the years, blaming the FAA for not taking NTSB safety improvemen­t efforts seriously and the industry for not regulating itself.

“In our Hawaii alone, the industry, while stridently arguing that it is safe and sensitive to neighborho­ods, has in fact ignored any sensible safety improvemen­ts, instead dramatical­ly increasing in recent years its volume of flights, at all times of day and night, in seemingly all weather, over more residentia­l neighborho­ods and to more risky and remote locations, at lower altitudes, while completely failing to address ground safety and community disruption concerns,” Case said.

The FAA said it conducts random and regular surveillan­ce on all Hawaii air tour operators and ensures companies address any issues. Gregor said the agency does not have concerns about the industry statewide.

The NTSB aviation accident database lists nine crashes of Hawaii helicopter sightseein­g flights in the last 10 years, including three with fatalities.

After a Hawaii skydiving plane crashed and killed 11 people in June, the NTSB called on the FAA to tighten its regulation­s governing parachute operations. The FAA said at the time that it had made changes to address NTSB recommenda­tions.

The chopper that crashed this week along a route used by all tour helicopter­s was found in a mountainou­s region inland from the Na Pali Coast, which is one of the most dramatic and sought-after destinatio­ns in Hawaii and was featured in the film “Jurassic Park.” Towering mountains with deep ravines and huge waterfalls make up the interior of the uninhabite­d state park. Red rock cliffs with thick jungle canopies rise from the Pacific Ocean to over 4,000 feet (1,219 meters) high.

Ladd Sanger, a Texasbased aviation attorney and helicopter pilot who has handled several crash cases involving similar helicopter­s in Hawaii, said tour operators on Kauai face unique challenges because of weather and topography.

Kauai “has microclima­tes, so the weather at the airport is going to be different than up at the crash location,” Sanger said. “Those microclima­tes can come on very quickly and dissipate quickly too, so the weather reporting is difficult.”

Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources spokesman Dan Dennison, who has spent years visiting and photograph­ing the area, said winter brings more rain and turbulent seas.

“You can have very low ceilings. You can have fog and cloud banks that move in very quickly. You can have heavy rain and strong winds that make flying difficult if not impossible at times,” he said.

The shoreline has beaches that could potentiall­y serve as emergency landing zones, but they are “few and far between,” Dennison said.

And even the beaches that are there would be a tight spot to land a helicopter.

“Kauai is incredibly unforgivin­g terrain,” Sanger said. “If you lose the engine there’s just really no place to land on the tour route that they were flying.”

 ?? DAN DENNISON — HAWAII DLNR VIA AP ?? This photo provided by the Hawaii department of Land and Natural Resources shows an area over Napali Coast State Wilderness Park where search and rescue are searching for a tour Helicopter that disappeare­d in Hawaii with several people aboard on Friday. Authoritie­s say the helicopter’s owner called for help about 45 minutes after the chopper was due back from a tour of Kauai’s Na Pali Coast on Thursday evening.
DAN DENNISON — HAWAII DLNR VIA AP This photo provided by the Hawaii department of Land and Natural Resources shows an area over Napali Coast State Wilderness Park where search and rescue are searching for a tour Helicopter that disappeare­d in Hawaii with several people aboard on Friday. Authoritie­s say the helicopter’s owner called for help about 45 minutes after the chopper was due back from a tour of Kauai’s Na Pali Coast on Thursday evening.

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