Montreal Gazette

Warnings issued since 2010

Mishaps pose ‘ greatest risk to Canada’s transporta­tion system’

- KRISTINE OWRAM

The Transporta­tion Safety Board has been warning about the potential for runway accidents at Canada’s airports since 2010, calling it one of the “issues posing the greatest risk to Canada’s transporta­tion system.”

Following the botched landing of an Air Canada plane in Halifax during the weekend, a prominent Canadian pilot says he shares those concerns and wants to see new safety measures implemente­d.

The safety board, an independen­t government agency that investigat­es accidents such as the one that occurred Saturday night, injuring 25, has made runway safety one of its top “watch list” issues.

In the agency ’s most recent watch list, published in November, it said an average of 150 Canadian aircraft are involved in approach-and-landing accidents every year. It warned that number has not decreased despite efforts by airports and Nav Canada, Canada’s civil air navigation service, to make runways safer.

“Operators, regulators and air-navigation service providers need to take more action to prevent approach- and- landing accidents, and to minimize the risks of adverse consequenc­es if a runway overrun occurs,” the safety board said in its report.

Capt. Dan Adamus, who has been piloting commercial flights since 1985, said that while Canada’s runways are generally safe, there are some specific issues that need to be addressed.

For instance, the runway on which the crash occurred appears to have lacked what is called a precision approach. Precision approaches make use of a variety of ground- based instrument­s to give pilots a specific angle and path to follow to ensure they land safely.

“In large airports such as Toron- to, they’ll have precision approaches at both ends of the runway,” Adamus, who is also the Canadian board president of the Air Line Pilots Associatio­n Internatio­nal, said in an interview.

“But some of the smaller airports, including Halifax, don’t have a precision approach on all the runways. There’s a cost to maintainin­g the precision approaches and it’s a risk analysis that they do.”

This heightens the risk of planes overshooti­ng — or, as was the case in Saturday’s crash, undershoot­ing — and Adamus is calling on the industry to speed up implementa­tion of better technology on all runways at all airports.

Some of the smaller airports, including Halifax, don’t have a precision approach on all runways.

CAPT. DANA DAMUS

Nav Canada is in the process of introducin­g new GPS technology to make landing safer on runways that don’t have precision approaches, but not all aircraft have the equipment necessary to use it.

Adamus said he’s also concerned that some airports in Canada still don’t comply with runway standards laid out by the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on. Those standards require a certain amount of additional space at the end of a runway to protect passengers in case of an overrun.

Both Adamus and the safety board have also pointed to unstable approaches — approaches at the wrong angle or the wrong speed — as another potential risk.

 ?? P H O T O S : A N D R E W VAU G H A N / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S ?? Firefighte­rs work Monday at the Halifax airport, where an Air Canada plane crashed on the weekend.
P H O T O S : A N D R E W VAU G H A N / T H E C A NA D I A N P R E S S Firefighte­rs work Monday at the Halifax airport, where an Air Canada plane crashed on the weekend.
 ??  ?? A Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­or inspects an engine from the Air Canada plane that crash landed Sunday morning at the Halifax airport.
A Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­or inspects an engine from the Air Canada plane that crash landed Sunday morning at the Halifax airport.

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