safety board report: That would likely bring higher costs for families wanting to travel by air, according to The Waterloo Record. The safety board report said the aircraft came in "too high, too steep, and too fast," hitting the ground 160 metres past the end of the runway. If Transport Canada were to mandate the changes, it would mean every child, even those under 2, who are currently allowed to fly for free if held by parents in their arms, would need to have his or her own seat. Isaac Appaqaq had accompanied his mother on the flight from Winnipeg, where she had a medical appointment because he was still breastfeeding. The other six adult passengers including Isaac mother and two pilots, who were all secured by seatbelts, suffered injuries ranging from minor to serious. "If the baby had been in his own seat, with a proper seat restraint system, he would have had a better chance of survival, given that everybody else survived," said Fox. It was just three days before Christmas, and they were headed back to Sanikiluaq, a small isolated community in the Belcher Islands, in Hudson Bay.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under safety board report, topics.
5.7.15