Virden eyes airport upgrades to help attract new business - Action News
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Manitoba

Virden eyes airport upgrades to help attract new business

While the airport in the southwestern Manitoba town of Virden is already home to an aviation school and several hundred flights each year, local officials want to upgrade it to help attract new businesses to the community.

Southwest Manitoba town looking for funding to widen, lengthen airport runway for larger planes

Four people are pictured standing in front of a business jet parked inside a hangar.
Officials in Virden, Man., are pictured in front of a Cessna Citation X owned by Air Andrew Ltd. From left to right: Virden town councillor Travis Penner, Air Andrew president Scott Andrew, Virden CAO Rhonda Stewart and town councillor Bruce Dunning. (Travis Golby/CBC )

Yu Kotaki left his home in Japan in search of a career as a pilot, but henever imagined the journey would take him to a small airport in southwestern Manitoba.

"I want to try for working in the major airlines like WestJet and Air Canada in the near future," the 25-year-old said. "That's my end goal."

The R.J. (Bob) Andrew Field Regional Aerodrome in the town of Virden is already home to an aviation school where Kotaki works as an instructor and hostsseveral hundred flights each year.

Butofficials in the community ofroughly 3,200 people,which lies about 70 kilometres west of Brandon,want to upgrade the municipally owned and operated airport to help attract new businesses to Virden.

A man is pictured holding the yolk inside the cockpit of a small aircraft.
Flight instructor Yu Kotaki sits in the cockpit of a small aircraft in Virden. He came to Virden from B.C., where he says he would've needed a second job in addition to working as a flight instructor. (Travis Golby/CBC )

Bruce Dunning, a town councillor and appointee on Virden's airport commission, said improvements could draw more corporate flights from companies in the agriculture and oil sectors, as well as those in the investment and insurance industries.

"What we're seeing more and more now is they're getting bigger planes in, to where they can't land here," Dunning said.

"They have to land in Brandon and then catch rides out, so that's one of the reasons we're looking at upgrading this airport."

Dunning said the town is considering plans to widen and lengthen the runway in order to accommodate the larger aircraft. The town wants to do the work in phases, but in total it could cost more than $7 million.

Virdenhas applied for funding through a provincial infrastructure development program, but has alreadyreceived a $2.5-million commitment from Scott Andrew and his brother, Brock, of Air Andrew.

A jet is pictured parked inside a hangar.
Air Andrew's business jet currently can't take off from the airport with a full fuel load because of the short runway, says the company's president. (Travis Golby/CBC )

The family-owned company has corporate aircraft, and also runs the aviation school and does crop spraying.

Scott said the company's Cessna Citation X, a business jet used for corporate travel, currently can't take off from the airport with a full loadof fuel because the runway's too short.

"There's some traffic some operators we used to see come in and out of therewe don't see them anymore," Scott Andrew said.

"It's not that they're not operating, it's that [our runway is] 1,700 feet too short and we're 25 feet too narrow for the equipment that's being used now."

Upgrading the runway is critical for the town, he said.

"In order to attract people and keep them it's just required infrastructure."

Ability to land in more adverse weather

An upgrade would allow planes to land in more adverse weather, includingconditions of reduced visibility or low cloud cover, due toTransport Canada regulations that changed in2018.

Therules now allow for a minimumceiling the lowest point landing pilots can descend to before making visual contact with the runway of 250 feet (about 75 metres) for aerodromes like Virden's. The minimum ceilingis currently 500 feet in Virden.

"The difference between 500 feet and 250 feet pilots just go, 'well that's huge,'" Scott Andrew said.

The airport can go to 250 feet as long as there's enough clearance on either side of the runway, but four hangars would have to be relocated.

People are pictured sitting inside of a private jet.
Scott Andrew, president of Air Andrew, says upgrading the runway is critical for the town. (Travis Golby/CBC )

Andrew said the new ceiling is important for both corporate and medical flights, the latter of which have been increasing in Virden after Shared Health expanded the use of air transports to move patients from rural areas.

The rest of the project hinges on how much funding Virden can get, andtown council will haveto decide how much work the community can afford to do.

"There will be some upgrades done regardless. It's just whether we'll do the lengthening and the width at this time," Dunning said.

While Kotaki, who moved from Vancouver to Virden in July, doesn't plan on staying forever, he said Virden's airporthas already helped him pursue his dreams.

Due to the cost of living in B.C., he said he would've needed a second job in addition to working as a flight instructor, but in Virden he's been able to focus on flying.

"So that's different from other parts of Canada," Kotaki said.

Western Manitoba airport hopes runway expansion will boost traffic

12 months ago
Duration 2:54
The runway at Virden's airport is too short and narrow to accommodate some planes, but local political and business leaders are hoping a multi-million-dollar expansion will change that.