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Local Air Canada service to resume June 28. 'Positive news' says airport manager

With Canada's ongoing vaccine roll-out acceleration together with various provincial governments' reopening plans that include travel, this summer is looking brighter
USED 2019-12-19goodmorningnorthbaybct  4 Landed safely. Jack Garland airport. North Bay. Photo by Brenda Turl for BayToday.
Jack Garland Airport. North Bay. Photo by Brenda Turl for BayToday.

Jack Garland Airport Manager Jack Santerre is a happy man today.

That's because Air Canada announced it would be resuming North Bay to Toronto flights at Jack Garland Airport beginning Monday, June 28.

"It's positive news for a change," he told BayToday. 

He expects 10-15 airline-related jobs will be returning as Air Canada Jazz is already retraining staff to prepare for the resumption of service.

Meanwhile, Santerre says the airport is already in operational mode.

"The airport was never closed so we continued to function providing regularly scheduled service for other air carriers. All of our safety protocols are in place so for us, it's a return to the service that was here before. There's no significant gear-up from the airport corporation, but from the airlines, there will be people coming back to work."

Air Canada will start gradually in North Bay with three flights a week on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. By late July that schedule will increase to one flight per day, then increase to two per day in the fall.

Santerre says as things rebuild the intent is to build the operation back to be sustainable with no support from the city, which he says was key.

"It absolutely helped us maintain the operation through this past year. Up to that point, we were self-sustaining and we expect to return to that position once traffic rebuilds."

See: Future of local airport 'on the line' without huge cash injection from City

And: Jack Garland Airport to receive financial assistance from the city to see it through the year

But he warns that everything is not going to fix itself overnight.

"It took us 12 months to get to this level so I don't suspect everything is going to be 100 per cent overnight, so there will be a build-back process. But we'll definitely need the region to support the service as well."

"Air Canada's domestic peak summer schedule beginning at the end of June has been developed to advance the country's economic recovery and support Canada's tourism and hospitality businesses during the important summer period," says a news release from the company announcing the re-establishment of select regional routes.

"With Canada's ongoing vaccine roll-out acceleration together with various provincial governments' reopening plans that include travel, this summer is looking brighter. As customers are ready to travel, Air Canada is taking a leadership position to support our partners in Canada's tourism and hospitality sector with service to 50 destinations from coast to coast, the re-start of regional services and new, non-stop flights," said Mark Galardo, Vice President, Network Planning at Air Canada.

"We are especially proud that our new state-of-the-art, Canadian-manufactured Airbus A220 aircraft will be operating across Canada. With our industry-leading CleanCare+ bio-safety protocols, promotional fares including for our premium cabins, compelling Aeroplan opportunities, and our new refund policy offering additional peace of mind, customers can book Air Canada with confidence.  We look forward to welcoming you onboard when you're ready to fly," concluded Mr. Galardo.

Air Canada is Canada's largest domestic and international airline, and in 2020 was among the top 20 largest airlines in the world.


Jeff Turl

About the Author: Jeff Turl

Jeff is a veteran of the news biz. He's spent a lengthy career in TV, radio, print and online, covering both news and sports. He enjoys free time riding motorcycles and spoiling grandchildren.
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