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Plane involved in three near misses after leaving 91原创 airport

No one was hurt in July 4 incident
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Pitt Meadows Regional Airport had to ground several aircraft, after a private cessna airplane caused multiple near-misses in the sky on July 4. This was one of the planes on the tarmac during this summer's Airport Day.

There was a lot of confusion and concern in the air on July 4 as a plane was involved in not one but three near misses within a matter of minutes above the Pitt Meadows Regional Airport.

The incident involved a privately registered cessna which took a series of unexpected turns, explained the Transport Canada report.

The aircraft had originally departed from the 91原创 Regional Airport and instead of coming in for a landing at the Pitt Meadows Regional Airport, it flew through the approach and had its first of several incidents when it cut off a Canadian Aviation College plane.

The pilot was then instructed to turn back to the Pitt Meadows runway, but they instead turned south and cut off a Vancouver Aviation College plane this time.

In response, the pilot was instructed to turn directly to the airport, when they instead flew northbound and went into the path of a Montair Aviation Inc. plane.

All of these unexpected turns also led to six other planes having to remain out of the control zone in order to avoid the wayward plane.

Several other aircraft were also grounded and delayed until the cessna eventually returned to the 91原创 airport.

Despite this concerning incident, the Transportation Safety Board is not currently investigating, explained media relations coordinator Liam MacDonald.

"It is not a reportable incident to the TSB as the aircraft was less than 2,250 kgs and was not operated under Part 7 of the Canadian Aviation Regulations," said MacDonald.

"Additionally, the air traffic controllers at Pitt Meadows were an effective safety defence and no risk of collision was reported by Nav Canada or the other aircraft involved, therefore, the TSB is not investigating."

No one was hurt in this incident, but there is currently no explanation as to why the unidentified pilot failed to follow the instructions from air traffic control.



Brandon Tucker

About the Author: Brandon Tucker

I have been a journalist since 2013, with much of my career spent covering sports and entertainment stories in Alberta.
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