Medicine Hat News

Medicine Hat getting $150K to study local airport’s future

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The province will provide money to regional airports in Alberta to study potential service expansion, including $150,000 to Medicine Hat.

The city-owned regional airport is among 10 facilities that will share $1.13 million to study masterplan­s, developmen­t or look into business opportunit­ies.

In Medicine Hat, money will be used to examine “Feasibilit­y and Business Case for Airport Growth and Developmen­t.”

That will help inform a major update of the Airport Masterplan, now underway, and due after the provincial­ly funded study evaluates business opportunit­y at the local airfield.

“This endeavour will pave the way for boosting the airport’s economic output and toward keeping Medicine Hat connected to other economies and major markets,” said Pat Bohan, managing director of the developmen­t and infrastruc­ture division.

He says the money will provide a detailed facilities assessment to evaluate the lifespan, condition and capacity of airport infrastruc­ture.

An overall update to the city’s airport strategic plan is set to be completed this year, an initiative of the developmen­t and infrastruc­ture division that economic investment officials point to as a key priority in 2024.

A feedback exercise was completed last summer with residents, with future phases planned this spring. The city’s land department began reworking lots at the facility in the late 2010s in hopes of attracting more airside businesses and commercial developmen­t at the southwest entrance to the city.

“Regional airports are key assets in supporting the air sector and the movement of people,” Transport Minister Devin Dreeshen said in a release. “This investment will support the growth of Alberta’s regional airports and help restore and develop connection­s between our regional and internatio­nal airports.”

As well on Thursday, the

City of Lethbridge received $150,000 to look into hangar developmen­t feasibilit­y, and similar amounts were provided to Red Deer to create a land developmen­t strategy.

Grande Prairie will study the potential to build a Border Services office. Fort McMurray will study recapturin­g lost passengers following the pandemic. Cold Lake will look into gaining schedule air carrier service.

Commercial developmen­t studies will be done in Whitecourt and Lloydminst­er, while masterplan­s are set to be done in High Level and Peace River.

 ?? NEWS FILE PHOTO ?? A sign welcomes travellers to Medicine Hat Regional Airport in this December 2020 file photo.
NEWS FILE PHOTO A sign welcomes travellers to Medicine Hat Regional Airport in this December 2020 file photo.

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