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Woman who was 1 of 2 student pilots killed in Manitoba plane crash was 'the essence of pure joy': family

Woman who was 1 of 2 student pilots killed in Manitoba plane crash was 'the essence of pure joy': family

Yahoo09-07-2025
The family of a 20-year-old woman killed in a mid-air plane crash in southern Manitoba on Tuesday morning says she had always dreamed of becoming a pilot, following in the footsteps of her father.
Savanna May Royes was one of the two student pilots killed when their single-engine planes collided near Steinbach, roughly 50 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg, on Tuesday morning, a family member said in a statement provided to CBC News.
She was "the essence of pure joy," the family said in a short written statement.
"Savanna's faith and laughter will forever touch everyone who was lucky enough to have known her, during her short life," the family said.
The crash happened around 8:45 a.m. in the rural municipality of Hanover, south of Steinbach and west of Highway 12, RCMP said.
The bodies of the pilots were found in the wreckage of the single-engine planes, RCMP said.
There were no passengers aboard.
"We're devastated," said Adam Penner, president of Harv's Air flying school. The crash happened during a training exercise, he said.
WATCH | RCMP speak about fatal plane crash:
Nathaniel Plett lives near the flight school. He and his wife were drinking coffee Tuesday morning when they heard a bang, he said.
"I said to my wife, 'That's a plane crash,'" said Plett. "There was a pillar of black smoke coming up, and a little later [we] heard another bang, and there was an even bigger pop of black smoke."
Harv's Air president Penner, who was in the flight school office at the time, said the students collided when approaching the landing strip while practising takeoffs and landings.
"We don't understand how they could get so close together. We'll have to wait for the investigation," he said. "There was a commotion … then I realized."
The collision was between a four-seater airplane, a Cessna 172, and a two-seater Cessna 152, he said.
One pilot was just a couple of months into training, while the other nearly had a commercial licence, Penner said.
Both were training to get their private and commercial licences to become airline pilots.
Mid-air collisions are exceedingly rare and make up less than half of one per cent of crashes ever recorded in Canadian airspace, a Transportation Safety Board spokesperson told CBC News in a statement.
Tuesday's crash was only the second such mid-air collision recorded in Manitoba.
Not including the Tuesday crash, there have been 45 such collisions in Canada since 1990, when the TSB was founded, and only one is known to have occurred in Manitoba history prior to the latest crash, according to the statement.
Penner said the flight school, which his parents started in the early 1970s, has students from Canada and around the world training for professional and recreational purposes. The school trains about 400 student pilots a year.
Students receive one-to-one training with an instructor, and it isn't unusual for them to fly solo during training, he said.
"It's been a shocking morning," said Mohamed Shahin, an instructor at Harv's Air and former student. "Really heartbreaking, and we feel really sad for the parents of the students we lost."
No information on the ages or the gender of the pilots has been released by RCMP.
"This is still evolving. Members are still on scene," RCMP media relations spokesperson Cpl. Melanie Roussel said during a news conference on Tuesday. "It's a two-vehicle plane collision, which is not something that happens every day."
Roussel could not confirm whether family of the pilots had been notified as of 1:30 p.m., during the RCMP news conference.
RCMP will continue to be involved in investigating the fatalities, said Roussel, though the Transportation Safety Board will take over the investigation into the cause of the crash.
The TSB, which investigates aviation incidents in Canada, said it has deployed a team of investigators to the crash scene.
Earlier this year, the TSB investigated a separate incident involving a staff member of Harv's Air Service at St. Andrews Airport north of Winnipeg.
The employee sustained "serious injuries" from a small fixed-wing aircraft propeller while helping a student who was struggling to start the plane, according to the TSB.
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