Passengers drowned after door design impeded exit in fatal NWT plane crash: TSB
GATINEAU, Que. — Canada’s aviation safety watchdog says a “significant safety issue” exists with a popular small airplane in which three passengers drowned during an attempted landing on a northern lake.
The Transportation Safety Board says problems with the Cessna 206’s doors have been known for more than two decades with no regulatory action.
“The risks resulting from delayed egress from the aircraft remain high and more defences are needed to mitigate this hazard,” the board said in an aviation safety advisory released Thursday.
In the advisory, the board notes the five-passenger, float-equipped plane was on a sightseeing trip from Fort Simpson, N.W.T., to Virginia Falls in Nahanni National Park last August when the pilot lost control while trying to land on a lake. The right wing hit the water, the plane flipped and came to rest upside-down and partially submerged.