Air Force rewriting rules after rescuer's drowning death in icy Arctic waters
By: Bob Weber, The Canadian Press 03/14/2014
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/canada/air-force-rewriting-rules-after-rescuers-drowning-death-in-icy-arctic-waters-250381571.html
The Royal Canadian Air Force is considering a rewrite of its rules for high-risk search-and-rescue missions following the investigation of a dramatic Arctic rescue in which one of its members died.
"Appropriate regulations would serve to restrict operations when the risk is pre-determined to be too high," says the final report into the mission.
"They would override excessive self-reliance and would serve to temper the (search-and-rescue) motto “that others may live.” The motto was not intended to promote a rescue in the face of unreasonable risks."
Sgt. Janick Gilbert, 34, drowned in an otherwise successful effort to pluck two Inuit hunters from the dark, stormy and ice-choked waters of Hecla Strait on Oct. 27, 2011.
The report says freezing water leaked into Gilbert's drysuit after he parachuted down with two other rescuers. The report suggests he became weakened by hypothermia and was bounced out of his life raft. It drifted away from him after a tether attaching him to the boat tore loose and he was unable to swim after it and climb back in.
The report's strongest conclusions relate to helping rescuers such as Gilbert, who was the team leader, make better plans for such missions — including how to decide when it's simply too dangerous to jump.
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By: Bob Weber, The Canadian Press 03/14/2014
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/canada/air-force-rewriting-rules-after-rescuers-drowning-death-in-icy-arctic-waters-250381571.html
The Royal Canadian Air Force is considering a rewrite of its rules for high-risk search-and-rescue missions following the investigation of a dramatic Arctic rescue in which one of its members died.
"Appropriate regulations would serve to restrict operations when the risk is pre-determined to be too high," says the final report into the mission.
"They would override excessive self-reliance and would serve to temper the (search-and-rescue) motto “that others may live.” The motto was not intended to promote a rescue in the face of unreasonable risks."
Sgt. Janick Gilbert, 34, drowned in an otherwise successful effort to pluck two Inuit hunters from the dark, stormy and ice-choked waters of Hecla Strait on Oct. 27, 2011.
The report says freezing water leaked into Gilbert's drysuit after he parachuted down with two other rescuers. The report suggests he became weakened by hypothermia and was bounced out of his life raft. It drifted away from him after a tether attaching him to the boat tore loose and he was unable to swim after it and climb back in.
The report's strongest conclusions relate to helping rescuers such as Gilbert, who was the team leader, make better plans for such missions — including how to decide when it's simply too dangerous to jump.
more on link