Calgary Herald

Decision looms over fate of aging jets

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • Outdated technology on two of the federal government’s four Challenger jets means the executive aircraft will no longer be allowed to fly in many countries — or even in Canada — within a few years.

While the need to replace the Challenger­s was flagged to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in a memo from officials following the election, making such a decision could be easier said than done, given the controvers­y attached to the planes.

Due to more congested airspace and the incorporat­ion of newer digital technology such as GPS in air-traffic control, countries around the world are phasing in new standards requiring modern navigation systems on all aircraft.

Two Challenger­s purchased by the federal government in the early 2000s are OK because they have relatively modern systems, Troy Crosbie, the Department of National Defence’s head of procuremen­t, said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

However, for the two Challenger­s purchased in the 1980s, “the cockpit avionics, particular­ly related the navigation system in the aircraft, don’t meet modern aviation standards for air navigation in crowded airspaces,” he said.

“And it would be economical­ly unfeasible to take and replace all of the avionics in those two aircraft.”

Officials highlighte­d the problem with the Challenger­s, which are owned and operated by the Canadian Armed Forces, in a warning to Trudeau shortly after the Liberal government won re-election in the fall.

“The Challenger fleet, which provides strategic transporta­tion to the government and the Canadian Armed Forces, is nearing obsolescen­ce and falls short of meeting its operationa­l requiremen­ts,” reads the memo, obtained by The Canadian Press through an access-to-informatio­n request.

“Additional issues will soon curtail its sustainabi­lity and limit its operationa­l effectiven­ess starting in 2020.”

Yet replacing them could be politicall­y sensitive as governors general, prime ministers and cabinet ministers have been routinely accused in the past of using the small private jets as personal flying taxis.

Arguments that the planes, which can carry nine passengers, are required for security purposes have done little to stop opposition parties from painting any use of the aircraft as inappropri­ate and wasteful.

Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government, which was accused of excessive use of the Challenger­s, made a point of retiring two of the aircraft in 2014 as a cost-cutting measure. The Tories said at the time that the move would save $1.5 million per year.

The aircraft are also used by the military to transport senior officers and troops in some circumstan­ces, as well as for medical evacuation­s.

The government bought itself some time when it inked an agreement in December that lets the two older aircraft continue to fly in the U.S., but other countries are starting to bring in the same technologi­cal standards.

Canada itself will implement the standards between 2021 and 2023.

“We’re going to have to figure out how to move forward here,” Crosbie said. “There’s different options . ... In the meantime, (the Challenger­s) continue to fly. The fleet is still delivering.”

THE COCKPIT AVIONICS ... DON’T MEET MODERN STANDARDS FOR AIR NAVIGATION IN CROWDED AIRSPACES.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s security staff looks over the Challenger jet in North Saanich, B.C., in early 2014.
Several of the jets might soon be unable to meet foreign standards for navigation systems.
CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s security staff looks over the Challenger jet in North Saanich, B.C., in early 2014. Several of the jets might soon be unable to meet foreign standards for navigation systems.

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