Medicine Hat News

MP says Ottawa underestim­ated Canadians’ desire to travel

- BILL GRAVELAND

A member of Parliament says Ottawa may have underestim­ated Canadians’ desire to travel when planning for a return to normal following the end of most pandemic restrictio­ns.

Airlines and airports have been grappling with a surge in customers this summer, compounded by staffing shortages affecting both carriers and federal agencies.

As a result, travellers have experience­d widespread flight cancellati­ons, baggage delays and lengthy lineups, particular­ly at Toronto’s Pearson Internatio­nal Airport.

Last month, due to a glitch, the ArriveCan app instructed about 10,200 travellers to quarantine for 10 days when they didn’t have to.

Annie Koutrakis, the parliament­ary secretary to the minister of transport, told reporters in Calgary on Tuesday that planning for a return to normal fell a bit short.

“We did anticipate. Yes, the planning did start. What we underestim­ated unfortunat­ely was the desire to which everyone wanted to travel and everyone wanted to travel at the same time,” Koutrakis said.

“The data shows us that we were not anticipati­ng everybody to start travelling to the degree that they did.

It’s not like we were waiting and not planning behind the scenes to be ready for it. It’s just more could have been done.”

Koutrakis said this is the first time the government has gone through a pandemic like COVID-19 and there are lessons to be learned.

Transport Minister Omar Alghabra was grilled about the delays at a House of Commons committee last week.

Conservati­ve MP Melissa Lantsman asked him if the federal government bears any responsibi­lity and Alghabra replied: “I blame it on COVID.” He pointed to labour shortages as the primary contributo­r to the delays.

Koutrakis said data indicates that abandoning the ArriveCan app would increase delays and bottleneck­s and removing the mask mandate would not reduce wait times.

Koutrakis announced nearly $2 million to help the Calgary Internatio­nal Airport improve current and future flight scheduling and connection times between flights, as well as establish dedicated corridors to enable physical distancing.

There were no representa­tives from any of the airlines at the announceme­nt. But Bob Sartor, the president and CEO of the Calgary Airport Authority, said the carriers are suffering through the same problems in hiring enough staff.

“The reality is, they are facing to a greater extent issues that we face at YYC and that is the need for additional staffing. They did what we did as an airport and they reduced significan­tly their staffing during the pandemic,” Sartor said.

Sartor said recertifyi­ng pilots and getting staff security clearances can take months to complete.

“Sometimes it can be two or three months. There are some things that have to happen, and one of the things is we need to get pilots certified. We need to get more staff like the air carriers do,” Sartor said.

“If we ever have one of these Black Swan events — and I pray we do not — we need a consolidat­ed aviation sector restart plan.”

 ?? CP PHOTO BILL GRAVELAND ?? Parliament­ary Secretary for Transport and Liberal MP Annie Koutrakis, centre, speaks as Calgary Airport Authority CEO Bob Sartor, left, and Liberal MP George Chahal look on during a funding announceme­nt in Calgary on Tuesday, August 23.
CP PHOTO BILL GRAVELAND Parliament­ary Secretary for Transport and Liberal MP Annie Koutrakis, centre, speaks as Calgary Airport Authority CEO Bob Sartor, left, and Liberal MP George Chahal look on during a funding announceme­nt in Calgary on Tuesday, August 23.

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