Taxi monopoly at Quebec City airport dismays budget travellers - Action News
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Taxi monopoly at Quebec City airport dismays budget travellers

Quebec City is the only major Canadian city with no shuttle bus or public transit to and from its airport.

Jean-Lesage only major airport in Canada with no shuttle bus or public transit to and from city centre

A cab driver unloads a suitcase for a passenger at Jean-Lesage International Airport in Quebec City. The only way to and from the airport is by taxi or private vehicle. (Radio-Canada)

Backpackers' mouths fall open, at the hostel in Old Quebec,when they learn the flat rate for a cab toQuebec City's JeanLesageInternational Airport is $34.25and there is no other way to get there except by taxi.

"Oh my God, 35 dollars!" the hostel's general manager, CarolineDuplain,said one young woman told her recently, wide-eyed. That's more than a night's stay at the hostel, she said.

Quebec City is the only city in Canada with a population of 500,000 with no shuttle bus or public transit to and from the airport.

Instead, the1.6 million passengers who land or depart from JeanLesageAirport every year must all take a taxi, if they don't have a lift.

At the Auberge internationale de Qubec, Quebec City's popular hostel, travellers are encouraged to arrange shared taxi rides to the airport. (Radio-Canada)

The lack of transportation alternativeswas underscored last Oct. 15, when,in a show of protest against theUberride-sharing application, taxi drivers left the airport without service for 11 hours.

Exceptionally that day, city buses served the airport throughout the day.

Normally, a city bus makes only a one-way trip, twice a day, to transport airport employees to and from Jean Lesage, picking them up and dropping them off at a bus terminal about 10 kilometres from the city centre.

Quebec City travellers planning to fly out of Montreal, by contrast, can take a coach line from downtown Quebecright to Pierre TrudeauAirport.

Pressure to change

At city hall, OppositionCoun. PaulShoirysaid the lack of affordable ground transport to and from the airportis hurting the Quebec City'simage.
tienne Grandmont, head of the sustainable transportation advocacy group Accs Transports Viables, says Quebec City should improve its service to visitors by offering a means of public transit to and from the airport. (Radio-Canada)

"I don't understand why we aren't [served] here," he said.

The head of the Quebec City Chamber of Commerce, AlainAubut, saidthe city needs an airport shuttle if it wants to attract more tourists and international conventions.

The airport is undergoing a major expansion, expectingto handle more than 2 million passengers a year within three years.

"By 2020, will we still be giving visitors the same cheap kind of welcome?" askstienneGrandmont, the executive director of a sustainable transportation advocacy group, AccsTransports Viables.

Major construction is underway at Quebec City's airport, to increase its capacity to two million passengers per year. (Radio-Canada)

Sky-high parking revenues

One analyst has gone so far as to suggest that the management of Jean Lesage Airportis in a conflict of interest on the issue.

"Airport parking is the third biggest source of revenue," said MichelNadeau, the head ofthe Institute for Governance of Private and Public Organizations (IGOPP), who conducted a 2014 study on airport management in Canada.

Nadeau said parking fees at Quebec City's airportbring in $6 million annually.

"They want people to come with their cars and not take public transit too much," he suggests.

It's a charge the airport vigorously denies.

"When I see people walking on the road to the airport with their suitcases, honestly, I find that appalling," said the airport's director of communications, Mathieu Claise.

Ata National Assembly hearing last March, one airport official saidall self-respecting cities offer some sort of public transportation option to and fromtheir airports.

The airport authority says it's not responsible for organizing buses, and it wants Quebec City's municipal transit authorityto take the initiative.

However, the head of the city's public transit authority, Rmy Normand, says there's insufficient volume to and from the airport to make a regular airport busprofitable.

Mayor not convinced of need

Last week, the mayor lashed out at the airport for the mountingpressure on the municipality to offer public transit service.

"The pressure through the media stinks. We detest that, and it generally doesn't work," Rgis Labeaume said.

"Are people going to take the bus? I am not convinced."

Labeaume said the airport should consider creating a collective taxi system instead.

"At some point, you have to see further than the end of your nose instead of dumping that on the city. We aren't managing monopoly money. We manage taxes," he said.

In the meantime, the city's visitors make do.

The Quebec City convention centre rents its own shuttle buses, as needed.

And there'sa sign-up sheet in the lobby of the popularhostel, the Auberge Internationale deQubec,for penny-pinching backpackers looking to share a cab.

with files from Julia Page and Radio-Canada's Marie-Maude Pontbriand