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Challenger logs show low-security officials taking flights

The majority of flights on the government-owned Challenger jets in the month of June were taken by defence officials who could have used commerical aircraft, the CBC's Greg Weston reports.

Low-security officials fly on taxpayers' dime

13 years ago
Duration 2:48
The majority of flights on the government-owned Challenger jets in the month of June were taken by defence officials who could have used commercial aircraft, according to documents obtained by CBC News

The majority of flights on the government-owned Challenger jets in the month of June were taken by defence officials who could have used commercial aircraft, according to documents obtained by CBC News.

The six Challenger jets logged 165 hours in June at a cost to taxpayers of almost $2 million, according to flight logs obtained by CBC News.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Gov. Gen. David Johnston are required to travel on the jets for security reasons. Butother government officials,who do not need the extra security, took 60 per cent of the flights, according to flight logs.

The documents reveal:

  • A general, his wife and three other officers flew to Brazil for six daysat acost of $335,000.
  • Defence Departmentpersonnel and their families got sightseeing trips around Ottawa at acost of $12,000.
  • Eightlower-ranking officers and a civilian flew across the country for an air show at acost of$120,000.
  • A general, two officers and a female civilian flew to Jamaica for 24 hours at acostof$96,000.

The issue of the use of the Challengeremergedfollowing reports thatGen. Walt Natynczyk, chief of the defence staff, had taken the government's jets to events including hockey and football games, and to join his family on a cruise starting in St. Maarten, a Caribbean island.

RCMP flights scrutinized in 2010

CBC News reportedthatsenior Mounties used RCMPplanes to fly to parties.

Natynczykhas defended his use, saying he travels with up to six or seven people, sometimes including a close protection team with automatic weapons. He also said he needs the secure communication lines provided on government aircraft that allow him to work while he's in the air.

According to the logs, Natynczyk and Defence Minister Peter MacKay both flew on separate jets to Trenton, Ont., leaving and landing only minutes apart, for the repatriation of a Canadian soldier. The Governor General arrived from Newfoundland on a third jet.The total cost that day was $45,000 and itwas the only time in the month that three of the six jets were in use at once.

National Defence figures put the cost of operating the jets at $12,531 per flying hour in 2010-11, much more than the cost of most commercial flights. But Lt.-Col. Norbert Cyr, a spokesman for Natynczyk, said last week that those costs also include things like the pilots' salaries.

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He notes they would be paid their annual salary whether or not they were flying, and pegged the actual flying cost at $2,630 an hour.

According to the auditor general's guidelines for reporting government expenses, the jets cost $12,531 an hour.

However, Canada's $33million-a-year fleet actually spends70 per cent of its time in the hangar.

Asked whether the government was planning to cut the jet fleet, the defence minister's office said in a statement that it wasn't ruling out anything as the government moves to balance its books.

Corrections

  • This story has been edited to correct previously quoted figures for the per-hour flying cost of the Challenger. The estimated 2010-11 total cost is $12,531 per hour.
    Sep 23, 2011 2:40 PM ET