Winnipeg Airports Authority faces $45M deficit this year due to pandemic - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg Airports Authority faces $45M deficit this year due to pandemic

The Winnipeg Airports Authority faces a $45-million deficit this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has drastically reduced passenger volumes at Richardson International Airportas well aspassenger-related revenue.

Passenger traffic at airport went from more than 10,000people a day in 2019 to fewer than 900

The departures corridor at Richardson International Airport was quiet enough Wednesday to allow the Winnipeg Airports Authority to hold its annual general meeting. (Bartley Kives/CBC)

The authority that operates Winnipeg's main airport faces a $45-million deficit this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has drastically reduced passenger volumes at James Armstrong Richardson International Airportas well aspassenger-related revenue.

The expected drop in revenue also leaves the Winnipeg Airports Authority struggling to meet $32 million worth of debt-financing commitments this year, as well as $7 million worth of capital improvements that cannot be put off, president and CEO Barry Rempel said Wednesday.

"We don't typically provide forward-looking advice. That's not something that we'rerequired to do, but I thought it was important for you to understand what we're looking at at the moment," Rempel said Wednesday at the authority's annual general meeting.

Passenger traffic at the airport wentdown from more than 10,000 people a day in 2019 to fewer than 900 a day this year, he said.

While vacationing passengers started to return this summer, business travellers have not, he told a small, socially distanced groupof people gathered in theeast end of the departures corridor at Richardson Internationalfor the meeting.

The loss of revenue cannot be offset by cutting costs, most of which are fixed, he said. The airport has sealed off unused departure gates and cut back on staffin an effort to cut costs by 25 per cent, Rempel said.

"This has not been easy. It has not been easy on our people."

Richardson also raised itsairport improvement fee from $25 to $35 per passenger in an attempt to recoup some revenue.

The pandemic walloped passenger and cargo flights this year at Richardson International Airport. (Jacques Marcoux/CBC)

This difficult year follows what Rempel described as a strong 2019, when theairports authority weathered challenges that included the grounding of Boeing's 737 Max aircraft which reduced airline capacity and the implementation of anew passenger bill of rights, which diminished co-operation among various players in the airlineindustry.

The airports authority also ended 2019 with almost $585 million in long-term debt, most of it related to the construction of its terminal.

Rempel called those events "first-world problems" in comparison to the pandemic, which has left the airport in an unsustainable position.

He said without an increase in revenue,the airports authoritywill burn through cash reserves into2021 and run out of room to borrow money in early 2023.

"We're in the position, starting next year, [of] starting to borrow to continue operating. That's not a good model," he said.

The Winnipeg Airports Authority has $38.6 million in debt financing commitments this year, and faces a revenue shortfall. (Jacques Marcoux/CBC)

Rempel called on the federal government to ease quarantine restrictions on passengers arriving from countries with as few, or fewer,cases of COVID-19 compared to Canada.

Ottawa has provided $2 million in rent relief for the WAA, whichpales in comparison to the assistance provided to American airports, he said.

Saint Boniface-Saint Vital MP Dan Vandal, a member of the federal Liberal cabinet, said in a statement the federal government is in regular communication with Rempel.

Vandal acknowledged Finance Minister Chrystia Freelandreceived a letter from Rempel outlining ways he believes Ottawa can support the aviation sector.

Rempel said one of the his industry's tasks is convincing passengers it's safe to fly again.

"I almost didn't come because of that, especially with the recent uptick in cases in Manitoba," saidIrtaza Azam, a tourist from Edmonton who was about to board a return flight home on Wednesday.

He said he ultimately decided to take a vacation and visit friends and family in Manitoba.

"It's not like the virus is localized to Manitoba or anywhere else. It's everywhere," he said.

Passenger numbers have plummeted

4 years ago
Duration 2:04
The authority that operates Winnipeg's main airport faces a $45-million deficit this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has drastically reduced passenger volumes at James Armstrong Richardson International Airport as well as passenger-related revenue.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story included a quote that indicated New Zealand does not require visitors to self-quarantine. In fact, only New Zealand residents and citizens (and their children and partners) are currently permitted to enter the country, according to a government website, and every person who arrives in New Zealand must isolate from other people for a minimum period of 14 days.
    Sep 09, 2020 7:25 PM CT