Stall, downdraft, decision-making may have played roles in BC air-taxi crash: TSB

Canadian Press | April 24, 2024 in Provincial

Local Community Advertising

The Transportation Safety Board says several factors may have played a role in the crash of an air taxi in BC’s Chilcotin region two years ago, including poor visibility and the pilot’s motivation to get to Lorna Lake after cancelling earlier in the day. 

The pilot and two of the five passengers aboard the Tyax Air Service Ltd. Beaver float plane were seriously hurt when it crashed not far from the lake on July 17, 2022. 

The safety board’s report says the pilot attempted to fly to the lake earlier in the day, but diverted to another location due to poor visibility. 

Photo credit: Canadian Press

On the second trip to the lake, the report says the pilot encountered increasing low cloud and reduced visibility, and when she tried to turn around, the plane’s speed dropped and it crashed, likely because of a stall or a downdraft. 

The report says close interactions with passengers can affect a pilot’s ability to make safe decisions, since the role of air−taxi pilots begins with customer service.  

The board’s report says because the pilot was unable to reach Lorna Lake on the previous flight, she was motivated to find a route to the destination and decided the visibility and cloud height were sufficient to continue. 

Local Community Advertising

Trending Stories

BC RCMP warn of bait-and-switch social media scam

UPDATE: Hwy 97 now clear between Lake Country and Vernon

Pascale St-Onge warns Facebook it could soon face 'heavy penalties' as feud over news rages on

Mother and stepfather jailed for 15 years over death of 6-year-old BC boy

BC man airlifted to Calgary hospital after grizzly bear attack in the Kootenays

Snow expected on Coquihalla, Okanagan Connector and Hwy 1

Watch out for snow on Coquihalla Highway, Okanagan Connector

Full-day closure happening on section of Lakeshore this weekend