Busy rescuers seek funds for standby pilots, radio link - Action News
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British Columbia

Busy rescuers seek funds for standby pilots, radio link

North Shore Rescue is pushing the provincial government to spend $20 million on a provincewide communications system specifically for rescues, and to chip in more to fund standby positions for pilots and emergency rescue specialists.

Mountain rescue volunteers say government funding is needed to meet demand

Rescuers ask for millions in funding

55 years ago
Rescuers ask for millions in funding

North Shore Rescue is pushing the provincial government to spend $20 million on a provincewide communications system specifically for rescues, and to helpfundstandby positions for pilots and emergency rescue specialists.

The demand is part of a push by the North Vancouver-basedgroup to reduce the dependence of the search and rescueforce on volunteers.

CurtisJones, who wrote a briefing notefor North Shore Rescue, says the number of calls that require timely helicopter accessis "pushing the operational envelope of what constitutes volunteer SAR."

North Shore Rescue says it receives80 to 90 calls a year from various authorities. The calls averagearound two per week, but some times of the year are much busier than others.

"During the summer we mostly look for missing or injured hikers, and during the winter its often skiers and snowboarders. So we consistently receive call-outs throughout the year," the group's website says.

Public funding for public service

The rescue group's spokesman, Tim Jones,hopes public and private partners will come forward to fund a standby technical rescue core team and standby helicopter pilot positions in the high-demand seasons.

North Shore Rescue used a helicopter longline to reach a 27-year-old who was stranded overnight on a mountain north of Coquitlam this summer. (North Shore Rescue)

"There has to be this hybrid model, we have to break this plateau that volunteerism is volunteerism," he said.

Kelsey Wheeler, a pilot with Talon Helicopters, is oneof the pilotsNorth Shore Rescue calls in onweekends. The demands this time of year mean he is spending a lot of his time in traffic getting to the airport in Richmond from his home in White Rock.

"I can't remember a long weekend recently where we haven't had a call in the summer," Wheeler said.

Jones says thathis group also wants the province topay $20 millionto establish a dedicated rescue radio communication line that currently does not exist provincewide.

North Shore Search and Rescue keeps a cache at a radio repeater station on Cathedral Mountain.

North Shore Rescuebuilt a $1 million radio repeater system for its local North Shore operations, but just to the northin Squamish, nothing exists.

"This is unacceptable,"North Shore Rescue wrote in its briefingnote. "With the exception of a very small number of very fortunate SAR teams, these other teams should not pay [for], nor can they afford, essential communications systems like this."

North Shore Rescue has around 40 active members involved in an array of positions, including field, search management, communications andpublic relations.

It does not charge for rescue services, but it does receive a stipend for some services, includingthe nightly sweeps its members conduct on theGrouse Grind hiking trail.

With files from the CBC's Chad Pawson and Emily Elias