Lethbridge Herald

Air taxi operators criticized over safety issues

TSB SAYS MANY BECOMING COMPLACENT

- Terry Pedwell THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Small aircraft operators in Canada have fallen into a trap of accepting too many safety risks — and it has to stop before more people are killed or injured, the Transporta­tion Safety Board warned Thursday.

TSB senior investigat­or Glen Whitney said so-called air-taxi operators — companies that carry fewer than 10 passengers in fixed-wing aircraft and helicopter­s, often in remote areas — don’t flagrantly break regulation­s as a general rule.

But over time, many have become complacent about the safe operation of their aircraft as they come under pressure to cut costs, Whitney said as the board released its findings from an investigat­ion of the industry launched in May 2015 that looked back on 15 years of data.

“I’m not talking about flagrant rule violations,” Whitney told an Ottawa news conference. “I’m talking about a gradual drift that occurs over time with every successful, though not necessaril­y safe, flight.”

The board analyzed more than 700 incidents that occurred between 2000 and 2014, involving aircraft used to ferry small numbers of passengers; everything from helicopter­s used by utilities to fixed-wing turbo-prop airplanes that service some of the most isolated regions of the country.

Over the years, investigat­ors have released 22 recommenda­tions to Transport Canada on how safety can be improved on such aircraft, including implementi­ng seat belts with chest harnesses and ensuring the availabili­ty of safety belts designed for children.

Just last month the safety watchdog called for clearer regulation­s around seatbelts as a result of its investigat­ion of a 2017 crash in eastern Ontario that killed four men who were in a Hydro One helicopter.

The TSB issued four new recommenda­tions Thursday, including a call on Transport Canada to educate pilots and service operators about the risks of accepting unsafe practices.

All too often, aircraft operators facing economic challenges put pressure on pilots to fly under unsafe conditions, such as flying overweight, or with minimal fuel reserves, or by delaying scheduled maintenanc­e, said TSB chair Kathy Fox.

“Although these vital air links have helped build Canada and sustain its population, air-taxi operations are at higher risk,” said Fox.

“The air-taxi sector continues to have more accidents and more fatalities than all other sectors of commercial aviation combined.”

The TSB also called on industry associatio­ns to share tools and data that can be used to implement best safety practices.

Investigat­ors found a wide array of safety standards have been adopted by air-taxi operators across the country with some going above and beyond current safety regulation­s while others comply with the bare minimum regulation­s.

Transport Canada should review the gaps in safety standards to ensure they are up to date, the board said.

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