Calgary Herald

Bird strike may have caused crash

Video shows animal close to engine intake

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • Military investigat­ors suspect a bird strike was been responsibl­e for last month’s deadly Snowbird plane crash in British Columbia.

The crash occurred shortly after two of the Snowbirds’ iconic Tutor jets took off from the Kamloops Airport while participat­ing in a cross-country tour aimed at boosting Canadians’ morale during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Video posted to social media shortly after the was May 18 crash showed one of the planes climbing a few seconds after leaving the runway before rolling over in the air and plummeting into a residentia­l neighbourh­ood.

Capt. Jenn Casey, the Snowbirds’ public-affairs officer who was riding as a passenger, was killed while the pilot, Capt. Richard MacDougall, sustained serious but non-life-threatenin­g injuries. Both ejected from the plane seconds before it hit the ground.

No one on the ground was seriously hurt.

In a preliminar­y report released Monday, investigat­ors confirmed that a close examinatio­n of video showed a bird very close to the plane’s right engine intake “during the critical phase of takeoff.”

“The investigat­ion is focusing on environmen­tal factors (birdstrike) as well as the performanc­e of the escape system,” the reported added.

The crash was the second for the Snowbirds since October, after another one of the aerobatic team’s Tutor jets went down during an airshow in the U.S. state of Georgia. That had prompted questions about the safety of the Tutors, which are 57 years old.

But the preliminar­y investigat­ion report appears to confirm the suspicions of former air force officers that a bird was likely to blame for the crash in Kamloops, which came only a few weeks after a military helicopter went down off the coast of Greece.

Six people died in that crash.

The Snowbirds remain temporaril­y grounded while the cross-country tour, nicknamed Operation Inspiratio­n, has been suspended.

“While we might quickly understand what happened in an accident, the most difficult work of an investigat­ion begins as we peel back the layers to understand why and how this happened,” said Col. John Alexander, director of flight safety.

“We are laser-focused to understand­ing everything we can about the accident so we can recommend effective preventati­ve measures to help reduce the risk of future occurrence­s.”

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