Times Colonist

Air Canada CEO hopes U.S. tax cut moves north

New look for Air Canada

- ROSS MAROWITS

MONTREAL — The CEO of Air Canada said he hopes President Donald Trump’s promise Thursday to U.S. airline executives to cut taxes will spur similar action on this side of the border.

Calin Rovinescu said such a move might prompt Canada to cut various fees, charges and taxes that represent about 43 per cent of the average ticket price.

“We certainly hope that as other countries become more competitiv­e, Canada will do likewise,” he said in Montreal after the airline, Canada’s largest, unveiled a new look for its planes and uniforms for its employees.

Trump promised airline executives at the White House that he would lower their corporate tax burden and roll back regulation­s. He also said he supports privatizin­g America’s air traffic control system.

Air Canada has long complained about the costs of flying in Canada that it said has prompted millions of passengers annually to catch flights from nearby American airports.

A proposal under review by the federal government to privatize Canadian airports would end up costing passengers more, Rovinescu said, adding that he believes new owners would raise fees to earn a rate of return. Critics, however, say airport privatizat­ion may actually bring down those fees as it would encourage greater competitio­n.

A spokesman for Transport Minister Marc Garneau said the government wants to make the most of growing air travel, tourism and business opportunit­ies between Canada and the rest of the world. “We will achieve this by supporting greater choice, better service, lower costs, and new rights for middle-class Canadian travellers,” Marc Roy said.

Rovinescu also said he thinks Canada could ultimately benefit if a ban on immigrants from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries is reinstated by U.S. courts.

“Canada becomes a destinatio­n that is very welcoming both in terms of tourists and immigrants, so we will see, I would think, some potential benefits flowing back to Canada from that.”

WestJet CEO Gregg Saretsky expressed a similar view this week, saying uncertaint­y surroundin­g new U.S. border policies could present a silver lining by increasing foreign tourist interest in Canada.

Rovinescu said a “small number of passengers” were displaced when Trump signed an executive order implementi­ng the travel ban, but later reached their destinatio­ns after it was lifted.

“We’re certainly hopeful we’re not going to have further operationa­l issues.”

The ban on travel prompted a large decline in internatio­nal travellers searching online for flights to the U.S., especially from people in the banned countries, said Patrick Surry of Hopper, a mobile applicatio­n that uses data to predict and analyze airfares.

Global searches for U.S. flights dropped 17 per cent in the week following the ban and 33 per cent from Libya, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Somalia and Sudan, compared to the final three weeks of Barack Obama’s presidency. No data was available for Yemen.

Canadian searches to the U.S. were down about four per cent, said Surry.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Air Canada CEO Cavin Rovinescu, centre, poses with employees wearing new uniforms in front of new lettering on one of the company's planes in Montreal.
RYAN REMIORZ, THE CANADIAN PRESS Air Canada CEO Cavin Rovinescu, centre, poses with employees wearing new uniforms in front of new lettering on one of the company's planes in Montreal.

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