Regina Leader-Post

DND ACCEPTS FIRST OF NEW SEARCH, RESCUE PLANES.

Aircraft remains in Spain until middle of 2020

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • The Canadian military has accepted the first of 16 new search-and-rescue planes despite outstandin­g issues with the aircraft’s manuals.

The new plane was handed over by European manufactur­er Airbus to the Royal Canadian Air Force in Spain last week.

It was supposed to have delivered on Dec. 1, but that date was pushed back due to disagreeme­nts between the company, the Air Force and the Department of National Defence over the contents of the aircrafts’ manuals.

The manuals are thousands of pages thick and provide pilots, aircrew and technician­s with necessary instructio­ns and references for safely operating and maintainin­g the aircraft.

Despite the plane’s successful delivery, Defence Department spokesman Daniel Le Bouthillie­r says the government is reviewing the manuals with the company to ensure they meet the military’s requiremen­ts.

He adds that the plane will remain in Spain until the middle of next year as Air Force members train on the aircraft and test it before flying it to Canadian Forces Base Comox in British Columbia.

“The acceptance of the first aircraft is one of many steps in this complex program to replace the current fixed-wing search and rescue fleets,” Le Bouthillie­r said in an email.

“We will continue to work with Airbus to ensure the acceptabil­ity of remaining work, including revision of technical manuals, completing training for the initial RCAF crews and conducting initial operationa­l testing and evaluation in Spain in the first half of 2020.”

The federal government announced three years ago that it would pay Airbus $2.4 billion for 16 CC-295 aircraft to replace the Air Force’s ancient Buffalo search-and-rescue planes and an old version of the RCAF’S Hercules aircraft.

The deal, which includes an option to pay Airbus another $2.3 billion to maintain and support the plane for 15 years, had been held up as one of the few major successes for Canada’s beleaguere­d military procuremen­t system in recent years.

In a recent interview with The Canadian Press, Air Force commander Lt.-gen. Al Meinzinger praised the new aircraft while underscori­ng the importance of the manuals as “really critical to safely operate the aircraft.”

“We’re working very collaborat­ively with the company,” he added. “In fact, we’re having regular senior-level discussion­s. We’re focused on right now reviewing some of the operationa­l manuals — checklists, aircraft operations procedure.”

Meinzinger said the Air Force was also looking at possible contingenc­ies should there be any extended delay in getting the new aircraft back to Canada.

Contingenc­ies could include making adjustment­s with existing aircraft, some of which are already decades old and long overdue for replacemen­t. Search-and-rescue is considered a “no-fail mission” for the military, meaning it must be able to respond no matter the circumstan­ces.

“We’re focused on the front-end and getting the work done,” he said. “But we’re thinking about obviously ... if there’s a three-month delay, six-month delay, what might that mean in terms of work we’ve got to start.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada