Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Firefighti­ng plane crashes in Australia, killing 3 Americans

Newsom says crew from California-based tanker

- By Rod McGuirk

SYDNEY >> Three American firefighti­ng airplane crew members were killed Thursday when the C-130 Hercules aerial water tanker they were in crashed while battling wildfires in southeaste­rn Australia, officials said.

California’s governor says the three American flight crew members who died when their aerial water tanker crashed while battling wildfires were part of a crew on a California­based tanker. Gov. Gavin Newsom in a statement on Thursday did not identify the crew members but called them heroes.

New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n confirmed the deaths in the state’s Snowy Monaro region, which came as Australia grapples with an unpreceden­ted fire season that has left a large swath of destructio­n.

Canada-based Coulson Aviation said in a statement that one of its Lockheed large air tankers was lost after it left Richmond in New South Wales with retardant for a firebombin­g mission. It said the accident was “extensive” but had few other details.

“The only thing I have from the field reports are that the plane came down, it’s crashed and there was a large fireball associated with that crash,” Rural Fire Service Commission­er Shane Fitzsimmon­s said.

He said the crewmen were aged 42, 43 and 45.

“We will be forever indebted to the enormous contributi­ons and ultimate sacrifice that’s been paid by these extraordin­ary individual­s,” Fitzsimmon­s said.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne said she had conveyed Australia’s condolence­s to U.S. Ambassador Arthur Culvahouse Jr.

“Our hearts go out to their loved ones. They were helping Australia, far from their own homes, an embodiment of the deep friendship between our two countries,” she said in a statement.

Payne added: “Thank you to these three, and to all the brave firefighte­rs from Australia

and around the world. Your service and contributi­on are extraordin­ary. We are ever grateful.”

The tragedy brings the death toll from the blazes to at least 31 since September. The fires have also destroyed more than 2,600 homes and razed more than 10.4 million hectares (25.7 million acres), an area bigger than the U.S. state of Indiana.

The three were part of a crew on a California-based tanker, the governor of that state said in a statement on Thursday. California Gov. Gavin Newsom did not identify the crew members but called them heroes.

Coulson grounded other firefighti­ng aircraft as a precaution pending investigat­ion, reducing planes available to firefighte­rs in New South Wales and neighborin­g Victoria state. The four-propeller Hercules drops more than 15,000 liters (4,000 gallons) of fire retardant in a single pass.

Spokeswoma­n Robyn Baldwin of Coulson, with headquarte­rs in the Canadian province of British Columbia and extensive U.S. operations, declined to identify the crew members or say what U.S. states they were from.

“We ask for privacy at this time as we mourn the loss of our crew members,” Baldwin said.

 ?? RFS ?? In this undated photo released from the Rural Fire Service, a C-130Hercule­s plane called “Thor” drops water during a flight in Australia.
RFS In this undated photo released from the Rural Fire Service, a C-130Hercule­s plane called “Thor” drops water during a flight in Australia.

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