Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

British Columbia

1 dead in seaplane crash near Port Hardy

Wilderness Seaplanes said weather was not a factor in the crash and there was "no indication of mechanical failure."

Cause of crash unknown, weather and mechanical failure ruled out by seaplane company

A sign with regalia and the text 'Transportation Safety Board of Canada'.
The Transportation Safety Board says it is looking into a seaplane crash that occurred about 45 kilometres from Port Hardy, B.C. on Wednesday and claimed the life of one person. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

One person is dead after a seaplane crashed near Port Hardy, B.C., on Wednesday, the B.C. Coroners Servicesays.

TheTransportation Safety Board told CBC News the plane went down in Warner Bay, a remote area located about45 kilometres northeast of Port Hardy.

Port Hardy RCMP say they were notified of the crash at about 7:50 p.m. PT Wednesday.

Three people were recovered, one of whom was dead, police said.

Wilderness Seaplanes, which is based out of Port Hardy, said in a statement that one of its aircraft, aCessna 185, was involved in anaccident.

Operations manager Vince Crooks told CBC News there were two passengersand a pilot withabout 30 years of experience flying around the West Coastonboard the aircraft. During the landing, he said, the plane flipped over.

He said the pilot and a passenger were able to escape the plane, and tried to save the other passenger who was trapped inside the aircraft, but were unsuccessful.

"Our pilot is very devastated about this," Crooks said in an interview with CBCNews.

Crooks said the Canadian Coast Guard and search and rescue arrived on scene within an hour of the crash.

The cause of the crash has not yet been identified, police say, adding that they've brought in special teams to investigate.

In its statement, Wilderness Seaplanes said weather was not a factor in the crash and there was "no indication of mechanical failure."

"It appears to be an accident during an otherwise normal landing on water," the statement reads.

With files from Pinki Wong