Kenn Borek Air: Canada's low-key, daredevil airline - Action News
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Kenn Borek Air: Canada's low-key, daredevil airline

It's the Canadian airline that doesn't always use runways. That's how company president John Harmer succinctly describes Kenn Borek Air. The Calgary-based company sends its aircraft to remote locations and dangerous conditions.

Flying to the ends of the Earth on wheels, floats and skis

A Kenn Borek plane flew to the South Pole last month for a medical rescue in the darkness of Antarctica's winter. (Kyle Bakx/CBC)

It's the Canadianairline that doesn't always use runways.

That's how company president John Harmer succinctly describes Kenn Borek Air. The Calgary-based company sends its 40 aircraft and 240 employees tosome of the most remote locations,through dangerous conditions and on difficult terrain.

We do work that a lot of people won't do or don't do.-GeraldCirtwill, Kenn Borekmaintenance engineer

Recently the airline hasflownplanes in Sri Lanka, Costa Rica, Turkey and in the Maldives, transported oil workers in Africa and travelled in East Timor. Crews are often switching the landing gear between wheels, floats and skis.

Some of its assignments includeperforming surveys and supporting the scientific community on every continent and travelling to both poles.

"We do work that a lot of people won't do or don't do because they don't have the skills to do it," said Gerald Cirtwill, a maintenance engineer with the company.

All the while, the company shies from the spotlight, despite garnering headlines around the world for some of its riskiest missions. Interviews with the company are rare;its website is basic and it doesn't have any social media accounts.
The rescue crew began its return journey to the British Antarctic Survey's Rothera station after resting for 10 hours at the South Pole. (National Science Foundation)

Tight-lipped company

Cirtwill was part of the recent medical rescue of two workers atthe South Pole. The company had a short press conference afterward, following a flood of requests from journalists.

The mission involved landing on the remote continent in the dead of winter, with 60 C temperatures and total darkness.The risks in such a rescue areobvious, butKenn Borekstaff don't dwell on danger. Workers focus on the job at hand and treat each flight the same.

In addition, many of the company'sflight crews have travelled to Antarctica dozens of times.

"There is risk with everything. You can slip and fall on your front step because it's icy," said Cirtwill, who has worked with Kenn Borekfor 11 years andin Antarctica for parts of nine years. "If you do your job, the risk goes down. It's not that bad."
Maintenance engineer Gerald Cirtwill doesn't dwell on the danger of the job. (CBC)

Days before the two planes left Calgary to head south, the pilots had to be taken off other jobs in Yellowknife, Fort St. John, B.C., andIqaluit.

Theyweren't asked to be a part of the mission, they were told. And they didn't mind.

Despite global attention during the Antarctica mission, the flight crew were unaware of all the press they were receiving, largely because they didn't seem to care. They still don't.
A Twin Otter operated by Calgary's Kenn Borek Air arrives at Rothera station after rescuing two patients from an Antarctic research facility at the South Pole. (National Science Foundation)

The flight crew are quite anti-Hollywood when describing the mission or the effect on their personal lives. The pilots and engineers say they weren't preoccupied during the mission by the hazards they faced, nor were theirfamilies gripped to their phones waiting for each update.

Pilot Wally Dobchuk jokes that his biggest fear during themidwinter flight to the bottom of the Earthwas running out of spicy Thai soup.

They are a light-hearted group, but have a no-nonsense approach to their work.

"It isa long flight, and you never really stop thinking. You just keep thinking aboutwhat you have to do to make it in properly and get this plane on the ground," co-pilotSebastienTrudel said.

Upon landingthey paused to relax, briefly. "Then we went back to work."

Despite its many prolific globe-trotting adventures, the companytries to keep a low-profile.

"Just another day at work, yes it was," said Harmer, who became the company's president eight years ago."It's part of the culture of the company, I think."

Kenn Borekhas come a long way from its days as a bush plane company. The airlinewas createdby Kenn Borekin 1970 to provide support to his construction company, which cleared land, hauled machinery and provided other services tofarmers and the oil industry in northern Alberta. Today, as the airline has grown substantially in size and scope, it isstill owned by the Borek family.

Watch footage from the medevac rescue in Antarctica

8 years ago
Duration 0:29
The Kenn Borek Air team made the perilous 10-hour journey from Chile to Rothera, Antarctica in order to transport two sick people to a hospital.

History of successes and failures

The daring journeys have come with a cost, includinganOctober 2010 crash that killed one person and injured nine others in northeastern Alberta. More recently, three men were killed after aplane crash on an Antarctic mountainside.

"Obviously, that was not pleasant," said Harmer. "We did a tremendous amount of analysis work and risk assessment. You have to. You can't just accept that an incident happened and move on. Every time something happens, it changes the way you operate."

The airline made several changes to improve safety includingtakingover flight-following in the Antarctic from a third-party organization. Italteredits GPS standard operating procedures to prevent incorrect data input andimproved the accuracy of aviation navigational charts in the Antarctic, according to the Transportation Safety Board's report.

Memories of such disasters are likely why Harmer was uneasy during last month'smission to Antarctica. Kenn Borek has flown to the continent in the dead of winter before, but it's rare.

"We were very lucky. The weather could have been a lot worse, it could have been a lot colder," he said."I wasn't comfortable sleeping until they got back on to the South American continent."

John Harmer explains how the company has grown up over the decades.

8 years ago
Duration 2:21
The CEO of Kenn Borek Air walks through the company's history in Calgary, Canada and the world.

As daring as the recentmedevacmission was, it may not even rank as the most courageous, considering all the company's adventures around the world every year.

I wasn't comfortable sleeping until they got back- John Harmer, Kenn Borek Air

After the crews arrived back in Calgary from the South Pole, there was pride in a successful mission, but nolavish celebration or time off.The planes were scheduled to fly north less than a week later. The crews also dispersed on different assignments.

It's just how the company operates. Instead of dwelling on success, it focuses on the next assignment to whichever continent, on whatever type of terrain, at any time of year.