1 dead after logging helicopter crashes on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast - Action News
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British Columbia

1 dead after logging helicopter crashes on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast

One person has diedafter a helicopter crashed into the ocean Monday on British Columbia's Sunshine Coast, according to the RCMP.

Helicopter went down near Killam Bay, around 40 km north of Sechelt

A Kaman K-Max K-1200 helicopter is pictured during tree felling works in Zurich, Switzerland on Dec. 17, 2019. A K-Max helicopter similar to the one pictured crashed on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast on Oct. 4. (Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters)

One person has diedafter a helicopter crashed into the ocean Monday on British Columbia's Sunshine Coast, according to the RCMP.

Officials confirmed the helicopter went down around 2 p.m. PT in the area near Killam Bay, at the entrance to Jervis Inlet, around 40 kilometres northof Sechelt, B.C.

"Witnesses in the area were the first on scene and some debris of the helicopter was located, but the lone occupant and pilot wasnot," read a statement from RCMP on Tuesday.

"A search was conducted in the area without success."

The aircraft was being used for heli-logging, according to the Transportation Safety Board (TSB).

The TSB sent an investigator to Nanaimo, B.C., on Tuesday to gather information and assess what happened.

Spokesperson Chris Krepski said the helicopter was a Kaman K-MAX aircraft, which is designed to lift more than half its own weight and has been used commercially for logging since the 1990s.

Helicopter appeared to have sunk quickly, witness says

On Monday,Jarvis Gray, a driver with withHigh Tide Tours & Water Taxi in Egmont,saidhe heard a call come in on hisradio saying that a helicopter had gone down in the area.

Gray saidhe was about five minutes away from the scene at the time,so he jumped in his boat to see if hecould help. He was the first one to discover the wreckage.

The only thing he saw when he arrived werethree pieces of rotor blade sticking out of the water.

"I imagine everything else had sunk by that point. And really, there wasn't anything left to see," Gray told CBC.

The B.C. Coroners Service is also investigating the pilot's death.

With files from Yvette Brend and The Canadian Press