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rotornut
27th Sep 2007, 14:34
Bomb hoax shuts down float planes

Airline has no plans to start screening passengers or bags, company exec says

Cindy E. Harnett, Times Colonist

Published: Thursday, September 27, 2007

A bomb threat that shut down Harbour Air seaplane service for four hours yesterday turned out to be a hoax -- but just last month a Liberal senator visiting Victoria warned the security threat in our Inner Harbour is real.

Yet as 40 flights were grounded in Victoria, Nanaimo, Richmond and Langley and hundreds of travellers were stranded on the docks yesterday, Randy Wright, senior vice-president of Harbour Air Seaplanes, said he has no plans to start screening passengers or bags.

"Everything is grounded," Wright said yesterday morning after a bomb threat was called into a Richmond call-centre reservations line around 7 a.m. about a Harbour Air plane in Vancouver.

"Safety is our No. 1 priority," Wright said. "We take every precaution. We want to make sure our customers are safe. The threat was in Vancouver but we're checking every one of our bases and aircraft."

Victoria and Langley police departments, Richmond RCMP, Harbour Air and Transport Canada were all investigating the security threat. Bomb-sniffer dogs were brought in to search the grounded planes and docks, and the water was also searched. In Langley, the airport search forced the temporary lockdown of Langley Senior Secondary school next door.

Planes didn't resume flying until about 11 a.m. after the threat was deemed a hoax. It's the first bomb threat the company has received in its 25-year history. B.C. Ferries has had two such threats in recent months.

But just last month, Liberal Senator Colin Kenny said that B.C.'s coastal transportation systems are wide open to terrorist attacks, and singled out seaplanes as an area that needs a boost in security.

"These aircraft take off fully loaded very close to buildings and there's just zero reaction time," he said at the time.

Kenny, who headed a Senate committee on national security and defence that issued a report in March highly critical of the country's coastline security, conceded that instituting airport-like passenger and bag checks on B.C. Ferries isn't practical, but said it is feasible for float planes, and should be done.

Wright maintains that float planes are slow, carry few passengers and little fuel and are an unlikely target for terrorists.

Sitting grounded in Victoria yesterday morning, a trio of businessmen bound for Vancouver had breakfast and weighed in on the security debate.

Victoria's Jake Duraan said he enjoys the convenience of hopping on a float plane without the time-consuming and sometimes bothersome security checks required at larger airports, "and on the other hand I want to be safe," he said. "I'm on the fence."

Steve Hiley believes there's a bigger threat of terrorism on B.C. Ferries vessels leaving from Victoria and Nanaimo: "That could take out 2,000 people like that," he said, clicking his fingers.

Al Brown, of Mill Bay, agreed he's more concerned about people driving their vehicles, unchecked, onto ferries. "They are much bigger targets than float planes," Brown said.

Terrorists likely aren't interested in taking out a small plane in a small harbour, he said. "It wouldn't have an international impact."

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http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/story.html?id=e4f8527d-0487-4c6e-81d6-734ff8f673f9&k=48121

Danny
27th Sep 2007, 16:09
I flew with them last month and what a breath of fresh air it was to be able to arrive at the terminal (the site of a PPRuNe Bash about 4 years ago in the Flying Beaver Bar), check our bags in and board the aircraft with none of the hassle or BS that goes with air travel these days.

Of course, it is only a small single engined turbo Beaver, about 16 seats and single pilot ops. Even if someone was stupid enough to try and hijack one of these they aren't going to go very far or do tremendous amounts of damage in a suicide mission.

The expense and hassle factor alone outweigh the risks. Leave them alone I say. One of the last bastions of enjoyable air travel. Let the Senator have his grandstanding and soundbites. I wouldn't trust any politician as far as I could throw them, especially when it comes to aviation security. As pointed out above, the ferries are a much bigger target and there's no security checks there.

Avman
27th Sep 2007, 16:39
Danny,

Just for the record. The Beaver carries 6 pax. Harbour Air operate the Turbo Otter which carries about 11 pax.

rotornut
27th Sep 2007, 17:49
Don't worry about our senators. They are a bunch of old political retirees who have nothing better to do than complain (The Canadian Senate has no real power under the constitution)

Avman
27th Sep 2007, 19:15
Not that I'm particularly bothered, but I wonder why this was moved to Biz Jets, Ag Flying, GA .?

Harbour Air operations (and similar companies) is akin to a scheduled and charter commuter type of operation.

armada
28th Sep 2007, 00:35
Move to Canada forum?