With no concrete timetable for when international travel will resume at Kelowna International Airport (YLW), the airport is at risk of losing $2.5 million in revenue as a result, according to the airportѻýs director.
YLW director Sam Samaddar said that he was advised by WestJet that if the status surrounding the airportѻýs access to international travel is not sorted out soon, the airline company will have to decide whether or not to cancel a number of Sun destination flights scheduled for early December.
ѻýIf we lose these flights, theyѻýre not coming back,ѻý said Samaddar. ѻýWestJet will not put on flights in the middle of winter and January and February for Sun destinations, because they know people will have already made their decisions on what theyѻýre doing.ѻý
YLW ceased international travel services on April 9, 2020, to mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 virus. Samaddar said that last summer, the airport proposed to meet with the federal government regarding the vaccine mandate for both employees and travellers, as well as the requirement of vaccination cards for travel.
ѻýWe involved the various parties ѻý the International Civil Aviation Organization, the World Health Organization and the International Air Transport Association. Globally, we put together a number of documents to best handle this between countries and states in order to resume air travel once that got started,ѻý he said.
ѻýAt every turn on these discussions, we kept getting turned back.ѻý
READ MORE: COVID-19: No more international flights at Kelowna International Airport
Although YLW is the 10th busiest airport in the country, Québec Cityѻýs Jean Lesage International Airport was recently given the green light to accept international travel, despite being the 12th busiest airport based on 2019 passenger numbers. Similarly, the Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport on Toronto Islands ѻý the ninth busiest airport in the country in 2019 ѻý was also granted permission to accept international travel.
ѻýThe fact that weѻýve gone through these difficult 16, 17 months as it is, not having these services for our flying community is just unacceptable,ѻý said Samaddar.
The decision to open YLW to international travel, however, is not a call that can be made by the airport alone. Samaddar said that there are three agencies involved: the Public Health Agency of Canada, the Canada Border Services Agency and Transport Canada.
ѻýIn many discussions and dialogue with them, weѻýve asked for what is the criteria and what is the timeline for opening up our airport back to accept international flights. We have not got an answer on any of that,ѻý he said.
ѻýWe asked to give us the criteria for what was used for Quebec City and Toronto Island with Billy Bishop Airport, and they werenѻýt willing to provide that either.ѻý
He added that if a decision can be made for the airports at Quebec City and Toronto Islands, a decision can be made for Kelowna as well.
ѻýWhat weѻýre doing right now is by picking certain communities over other communities, weѻýre allowing an uneven playing field for the recovery of those communities as it relates to the economy,ѻý he said.
In July, Kelowna-Lake Country MP-elect Tracy Gray wrote to the federal Minister of Transport asking the ministry what metrics are being used to determine which airports in Canada are allowed to re-open to international travel.
ѻýDespite writing to the Minister in July, I have heard nothing but silence from the Minister or his department,ѻý said Gray.
ѻýThe people of KelownaѻýLake Country deserve to hear from this government what metrics are being used to keep Kelowna International Airport closed, and what the timeline for re-opening is.ѻý
READ MORE: Kelowna International Airport launches employee COVID-19 testing program
aaron.hemens@kelownacapnews.com
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