N.S. jet crash lawsuit: Transport Canada challenging class action certification
HALIFAX — The certification of a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of passengers aboard an Air Canada jet that crashed at the Halifax airport in 2015 was challenged in court Monday by federal lawyers.
The lawyers argued Transport Canada could not be sued because it did not owe a duty of care to the passengers aboard Flight 624. They argued the department should be exempt from the lawsuit because it had no direct relationship with the passengers
Shortly after midnight on March 29, 2015, the Airbus 320 approached Halifax Stanfield International Airport in gusty winds and heavy snowfall. The jet hit some power lines, slammed into the ground about 200 metres short of Runway 05 and bounced into the air, where it tore through a navigation antenna.
When the twin-engine plane hit the ground a second time, about 70 metres before the runway threshold, one of its engines and its landing gear were torn off as it skidded along the runway amid a shower of sparks for another 570 metres, according to the Transportation Safety Board.


