Toronto Pearson First Canadian Airport to Achieve Global Health Accreditation

WASHINGTON – Toronto Pearson International Airport, operated by the Greater Toronto Airports Authority (GTAA), is the first Canadian airport to be accredited under the Airports Council International (ACI) Airport Health Accreditation programme.

“Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, North American airports have taken unprecedented steps to ensure the health and safety of passengers and airport workers,” said ACI-NA President and CEO Kevin M. Burke. “We are proud to recognize Toronto Pearson International Airport as the first Canadian airport to achieve their Airport Health Accreditation. This important step further demonstrates the airport’s deep commitment to promoting health and safety as air travel begins to recover.”

ACI’s Airport Health Accreditation program assists airports by assessing new health measures and procedures introduced as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in accordance with ICAO Council Aviation Recovery Task Force recommendations. Areas of assessment for accreditation include cleaning and disinfection, physical distancing (where feasible and practical), staff protection, physical layout, passenger communications and passenger facilities.

“We all have a role to play in overcoming COVID-19 and building trust in aviation—we are truly all in this together,” said Deborah Flint, President and CEO, GTAA. “At Toronto Pearson, we’ve taken this calling and run with it. We’re not only telling passengers and employees what they can do to help limit spread, but we have transformed our operation to deliver health and hygiene practices with consistency and quality assurance.

“We call it our five-point ‘Healthy Airport’ commitment,” Flint continued. “It encompasses everything from making passenger and employee health our top priority and working diligently with government and industry partners to communicating transparently and ensuring that our approach is innovative, aligned with industry standards and best in class by utilizing the latest processes and technologies.”

The Airport Health Accreditation programme is also consistent with the recommendations and industry priorities put forward by ACI-NA’s Airport Industry Recovery Advisory Panel in June 2020. As the report recommends, the restart and recovery of the aviation sector will require a consistent and harmonized approach with clear industry standards and good practices. More airports adopting the Airport Health Accreditation program is a concrete step that airports can take to reaffirm their commitment to health and safety.

“Consistency will be the key to a sustained global recovery from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and Toronto Pearson’s achievement in being accredited by the ACI Airport Health Accreditation programme contributes to a globally-coordinated approach which will foster public confidence in aviation,” said ACI World Director General Luis Felipe de Oliveira. “I am very impressed in how Toronto Pearson has swiftly adapted to new realities to introduce new measures based on globally-consistent protocols.”

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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.