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Investigators raising crashed B.C. float plane

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CTV British Columbia: St John Alexander reports
A single-engine plan that crashed off Saturna Island was pulled from the water Tuesday.
CTV British Columbia: Leah Hendry on the victim
More details emerged Tuesday about Catherine White Holman, one of the six victims of a plane crash off Saturna Island.
CTV News Channel: Mark Miller, Aviation expert
Investigators will be able to consult the pilot of the float plane that crashed off Saturna Island to determine what went wrong, but will still have to examine the plane itself for possible mechanical failures.
Canada AM: Vernon Grose, aviation expert
An aviation safety expert discusses a new study which shows that aviation-related injuries are on the rise.
CTV National News: Rob Brown on the plane crash
Investigators in B.C. are looking into a plane crash that killed six people, and are hoping two survivors can shed light on what happened. They also expect to learn more when the sunken wreckage is retrieved.
CTV British Columbia: St. John Alexander reports
The RCMP and Transportation Safety Board have begun an investigation into a horrific float plane accident that killed six people in the B.C. Gulf Islands Sunday.
CTV British Columbia: Maria Weisgarber reports
Saturna Island is a community in shock tonight, but it's also a community coming together. Residents are dealing not only with the trauma being felt by those who assisted with the rescue effort -- they're also grieving the loss of two of their own.
CTV British Columbia: Leah Hendry on the victims
A maternity doctor and her infant daughter, and one American citizen, are among six victims of a plane crash off a B.C. gulf island.
CTV News Channel: Rob Brown with the details
Investigators are still not closer to finding out why a float plane crashed and killed six people including an infant. However, weather was not a factor in the crash.
CTV News Channel: Mike Stacey, coast guard
A Canadian Coast Guard maritime search-and-rescue co-ordinator describes what is next after divers discovered recovered the bodies of six people who were in a float plane that crashed in the B.C
Canada AM: Troy Haddock in Victoria
A search and rescue worker describes how divers have recovered the bodies of six people who were missing in the crash of a float plane crash in B.C.'s Gulf Islands.
CTV British Columbia: St. John Alexander reports
A float plane has crashed in the southern Gulf Islands, and rescue efforts are underway.

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By: The Canadian Press

Date: Tuesday Dec. 1, 2009 12:37 PM PT

SATURNA, B.C. — A float plane that crashed off Saturna Island, killing six, has been raised from the ocean floor, allowing investigators to begin their search for answers to what caused the tragedy.

"We have divers in the water trying hook up the wreckage for retrieval," Bill Yearwood, an investigator with the federal Transportation Safety Board, said from the scene Tuesday morning.

The plane was out of the water around noon, and was to be loaded onto a barge.

The right wing was missing and the left wing was intact but damaged. Both pontoons had been sheared off.

"It'll be on a barge and inspected before we head back to Vancouver, then it'll be trucked to Vancouver," Yearwood said.

The single-engine de Havilland Canada Beaver owned by Seair Seaplanes of Richmond, B.C., crashed on takeoff from Lyall Harbour on Sunday afternoon.

Six passengers were trapped in the sinking plane and their bodies were found still in the plane by search divers. The pilot and one female passenger managed to escape.

Seair manager Terry Hiebert said the pilot, who had not yet been interviewed by crash investigators, was recovering in hospital from broken bones and cuts.

He said the pilot had six years experience, three of them with Seair.

Hiebert said authorities have not told the company to make any changes and Seair's operations were "as normal as can be under the circumstances."

"We're still in shock, still dealing with it," he said. "Emotions are up and down."

Seair's float plane fleet includes five of the vintage Beavers, the Canadian-designed and built hinterland workhorse.

The aircraft that crashed had been overhauled recently, said Hiebert.

The crash victims were identified Monday as Vancouver Dr. Kerry Margaret Morrissey, her infant daughter Sarah, Catherine White-Holman of Vancouver, Thomas Gordon Glenn of White Rock, B.C., and Californians Cindy Shafer and Richard Bruce Haskett, who were part-time residents of Saturna Island.

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