Det er helt nytteløst å indikere at to sertifiserte flygere kanskje kan gjøre det lettere å fly disse helikoptrene sikkert. (Red.)
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Four people, including infant, survive
crash of medical transport helicopter
DELAWARE COUNTY, Pa. — Four people survived when a helicopter transporting
a pediatric medical patient crashed in Delaware County, Pennsylvania,
authorities said Tuesday.
"At this time, there are no reported (injuries) to the public, responders,
and only minor injuries to one of the helicopter crew members," police in Upper
Darby Township tweeted.
The helicopter was transporting an infant from Maryland to the Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia. Tim Boyce, Delaware County director of emergency
services, said the infant was safely taken to the hospital via ground
transportation after the crash.
According to officials, the helicopter crashed in front of a church in
Drexel Hill just before 1 p.m. ET. Flight tracking website FlightAware shows the
helicopter lifting off from Chambersburg, Pennsylvania — 108 miles to the west —
about 45 minutes earlier.
A crew member helped get everyone to the top of the aircraft, Boyce
said.
The Federal Aviation Administration said the craft was a Eurocopter EC135 and the National
Transportation Safety Board would lead the investigation.
NTSB spokesperson Jennifer Gabris said: "The NTSB is investigating. I will
share additional information when I have it."
The helicopter is registered to Air Methods
and was from the LifeNet program. Air Methods provides medevac helicopter
services using "the world's largest civilian fleet" of 400 helicopters in 48
states, according to a company website.
"Our team will cooperate fully with (FAA and NTSB) efforts to assess the
cause of this unfortunate accident," Air Methods spokesperson Doug Flanders
said.
Around the time of the crash, the weather in the area was partly cloudy.
Winds were gusting around 20 mph, up to 25 mph just before noon.
Medevac helicopters have repeatedly come under fire from NTSB investigators
who say more needs to be done to improve the safety of emergency medical flight
operations. A 2018 crash of an Air Methods medevac helicopter in Wisconsin
killed three on board, with the NTSB citing the pilot's loss of control.
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