Air Canada, Flair planning June 1 restart in Saint John, airport says - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 11:21 AM | Calgary | 3.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Air Canada, Flair planning June 1 restart in Saint John, airport says

Saint John Airport is gearing up for a looming restart, acting CEO Greg Hierlihy says.

Porter Airlines also expected to return as airport gears up for commercial flight restart

Air Canada and Flair Airlines have both scheduled June 1 as a flight restart date at Saint John Airport. (Julia Wright / CBC file photo)

Air Canada flights could be back on the runway at Saint John Airport by June.

In an interview Thursday, Saint John Airport acting CEO Greg Hierlihysaid the airport is gearing up for a loomingrestart, which will see suspended flights resume and new airlines touching down for the first time.

The airlines will "react to demand," he said, "butright now we've got a couple of Air Canada flights a day to Toronto and Montreal on the schedule as of June 1."

Air Canadasuspended all flights out of Saint John, as well as Toronto flights out of Fredericton,in January because of pandemic-driven travel restrictions and reduced demand.

Flair Airlines, which announced in February that it has chosen Saint John Airport as its only New Brunswick destination, has also moved its first-flight date to June 1 from May 1, Hierlihy said.

Porter Airlines, which had cancelled all routes until May 19,has not scheduled a return date.

But the airport "fully expects they will return," Hierlihy said.

"It's a matter of when."

Saint John Airport acting CEO Greg Hierlihy says the airport will play a critical role in the region's post-pandemic economic recovery. (Brian Comeau/Submitted by Saint John Airport)

Much depends on vaccine rollout, travel restrictions

For both Air Canada and Flair, the June 1 date is a bit of a moving target.

"It will rely a great deal on the easing of travel restrictions and the 14-day quarantine requirement," Hierlihy said. "But with the vaccine rollout we are very optimistic about that."

In an email, Pascale Dry, Air Canada's director of communications for Eastern Canada, Quebec and Europe, also emphasized the dependence on the pandemic's direction.

"We continue to evaluate and adjust our route network in response to the trajectory of the pandemic and travel restrictions," Dry said.

Thereopening of the Atlantic bubble, scheduled forApril 19, is "an optimistic sign," Hierlihy said, although it won't have a large impact on air travel for the Saint John Airport.

"What we really need is to open up to the rest of Canada to really drive traffic."

'Some real optimism' around the industry

An accelerated vaccine rollout, the announcement Wednesday that WestJet plans to resume flights to the Atlantic region at the end of June, as well as remarks by Premier Blaine Higgs following the announcement, have all sparked "some real optimism" around the industry, Hierlihy said.

Higgs welcomed WestJet's announcement Thursday, noting "it's good news that they wantto get back in the province and thatthey're picking another airport to open up to, not just Moncton."

"I'd like to think it's just a matter of a week or two or three and we'll get Saint John included as well."

Hierlihy said he was pleased that the airport's importance as as an economic engine of the region was given a nod.

He also addressed occasional rumours and speculationabout the airport's possible closure, saying he's "confident" the airport has a key role to play in the region.

With the economy poised for turnaround and borders poised to reopen, airports will be a key driver of post-pandemic recovery, Hierlihy said.

"I'm confident that there will be recognition of the critical importance of the Saint John Airport," he said.

"The fact that we're getting scheduled flights back will continue to drive that confidence."