Canada’s Airports Welcome Federal Infrastructure Funds for Small Airports

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 21, 2016

 

OTTAWA – The Canadian Airports Council today welcomed the announcement by Transport Minister Marc Garneau of $27.6 million in funding for 13 regional airports under the Airports Capital Assistance Program. The trade association for airports, however, urges the federal government to act on recommendations to improve capital fund options for small airports going forward.

“The Airports Capital Assistance Program has provided invaluable safety and security related support for Canada’s small commercial airports since airports were transferred to local management, and it is great to see the Government of Canada’s continued support of this program,” said CAC President Daniel-Robert Gooch. “For airports with fewer than 600,000 passengers a year, the government has always recognised the challenges associated with self-funding both airport operations and infrastructure needs.  But we have airports and projects that should be eligible today and aren’t because of a quirk in federal policy.”

The CAC has joined with other regional airports in the Partners for Regional Aviation Infrastructure to jointly promote reforms to ACAP, including:

• Formation of a new, separate fund for small NAS airports that would be eligible for ACAP without a ban on funds for airports on federal land (see below).
• Review and revision of project and equipment eligibility criteria for more consistent decision making
• Funds for mandated safety upgrades, such as anticipated regulatory requirement for some airports to build Runway End Safety Areas
• Improved communication and transparency
• Increased funding for the program, which at $38 million a year hasn’t seen in an increase in more than 10 years

A recent review of transport policy by former Cabinet Member David Emerson recommends the government increase capital funding for small airports, including additional funds for ACAP so that it can also fund the lengthening and surfacing of runways in remote and northern airports.

Six Small Airports Need Not Apply

Canada’s airports have lobbied for six years to eliminate a ban on National Airports System airports on federal land participating in federal infrastructure programs – including ACAP, with six airports’ infrastructure deficit accumulating as a result.  After a CAC appearance in the spring, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance agreed – urging the government to “ensure that  small  National  Airports  System airports  are  not  unfairly  excluded  from  eligibility  for  infrastructure funds.”

“Our airports have come to a critical point where infrastructure support is not only a matter of fairness, but rather a necessity,” says CAC Small Airports Caucus Chair Doug Newson, whose Charlottetown Airport is one of the six affected airports.  “Whether it be critical runway repairs or adequate space for passengers to line up for security, the infrastructure deficit is growing and there are significant long-term sustainability challenges”

NAS airports operate on a not-for-profit basis, but lease their land from the federal government under long term leases with assets reverting to the federal government after 60 years.  Six NAS airports in Charlottetown, Fredericton, Gander, London, Prince George and Saint John have fewer passengers than the ACAP threshold and fall into this category – meaning they must pay rent to the federal government and are ineligible for ACAP and several other federal infrastructure programs.

About the Canadian Airports Council

The Canadian Airports Council (CAC), a division of Airports Council International-North America, is the voice for Canada’s airports community.  Its 49 members represent more than 100 airports, including all of the privately operated National Airports System (NAS) airports and many municipal airports across Canada.

 

About ACI-NA

Airports Council International-North America (ACI-NA) represents local, regional, and state governing bodies that own and operate commercial airports in the United States and Canada. ACI-NA member airports enplane more than 95 percent of the domestic and virtually all the international airline passenger and cargo traffic in North America. Approximately 380 aviation-related businesses are also members of ACI-NA, providing goods and services to airports. Collectively, U.S. airports support more than 11.5 million jobs and account for $1.4 trillion in economic activity – or more than seven percent of the total U.S. GDP. Canadian airports support 405,000 jobs and contribute C$35 billion to Canada’s GDP. Learn more at www.airportscouncil.org.