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Safety board says maintenance problems, blade failure led to fatal crash in B.C.

RICHMOND, B.C. — The Transportation Safety Board says a fatal helicopter crash near Campbell River, B.C., three years ago was caused by a failure in the main rotor blades. The lone pilot, who was also the owner of E & B Helicopters Ltd.
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Kathleen Fox, chair of the Transportation Safety Board, and Doug McEwen, right, a senior investigator, leave a news conference after releasing a report, in Halifax, Thursday, May 18, 2017. A safety board report into the crash of a helicopter near Campbell River, B.C., says maintenance opportunities were missed before a fatal flight in September 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

RICHMOND, B.C. — The Transportation Safety Board says a fatal helicopter crash near Campbell River, B.C., three years ago was caused by a failure in the main rotor blades. 

The lone pilot, who was also the owner of E & B Helicopters Ltd., died when the chopper slammed into a building and burst into flames. 

No one was hurt on the ground. 

The safety board’s investigation found an engine power problem likely forced the pilot to make an emergency landing, but fatigue in the main rotor blades deformed them to the point the helicopter couldn’t remain airborne. 

The report says several opportunities to improve the safety of the flight had been missed. 

It says the company’s owner was also the operations manager and directed how the maintenance department was to respond to a partial loss of engine power the week before.

“If company management routinely deviates from regulatory requirements, there is an increased risk that an unsupportive safety culture will develop, affecting the entire organization,” the safety board says in a statement. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 8, 2022. 

The Canadian Press