NOT CLEARED FOR TAKE-OFF: Transport Canada backlog grounds pilots

Amid a surge in demand for pilots as travel begins to rebound after two years of depressed business due to COVID-19 restrictions, a bottleneck in the approvals process at Transport Canada is keeping a significant number of pilots who have been deemed fit to fly by aviation medical examiners on the ground, according to the Air Line Pilots Association.

“That process is taking nine, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 months. And that’s just ludicrous,” says association president Tim Perry. “This is affecting pilots’ livelihoods.”

Transport Canada’s standard timeline is 40 business days.

“We’re going six months without a return phone call or without a return email. Partly, this is taking too long, and partly, we’ve got a major issue in terms of information exchange,” Perry says, adding, “We do believe that, in part, these things are being held up because Transport Canada is under-resourced.”

The union, which represents some 6,000 Canadian pilots, has repeatedly raised the issue with Transport Canada and plans to send it and Transport Minister Omar Alghabra a second letter of concern within a week.

Transport Canada spokesman Hicham Ayoun says medical certification – often the final step in a licence renewal, which is required every two years – usually takes about two months.

“However, under the current circumstances, this service standard may experience delays,” he says. “High demand for service, increasing medical complexity, and pandemic-related challenges are some of the factors contributing to the delays in service delivery.”

Most of the roughly 60,000 annual applications for medical certification, including private ones, are requests to reissue existing certificates, and are validated by medical examiners “in the field, with no wait time,” Ayoun says.

But new or “medically complex” applications need more time for assessment or information gathering in order to ensure public safety, he says. Complex cases include those where pilots were flagged for potential physical or mental health issues but subsequently deemed fit to fly by examiners.

Along with unions, pilots say the backlog is costing them and their colleagues by way of lower incomes as well as higher insurance premiums caused by the greater number of employees who are on long-term disability while awaiting their medical certificates.

“When someone is off work on long-term disability, that can affect their monthly income, it can affect their pensionable income,” Perry says.

Two pilots, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss employment matters or their medical status, say they have reached out to Transport Canada’s civil aviation medicine branch dozens of times but never received a reply.

An Air Canada pilot said he applied for medical certification more than six months ago, with no word since.

The delays are not limited to commercial pilots. Maxime Allaire, a Montreal-area realtor, and recreational flyer, says he took his medical exam in August but has yet to hear from Transport Canada.

“They have a reputation not to be too quick with anything in the best of times,” says Benoit Gauthier, a retired pilot who flew with Air Canada for 37 years.

Meanwhile airlines continue to rehire flight crews following temporary layoffs as testing rules ease and travel advisories lift.

“We are working in real time towards the restoration of our pre-pandemic network and continue to recall our highly-trained and experienced professionals, who in many cases have been furloughed for many months,” WestJet spokeswoman Denise Kenny says, noting that the company is “aware of the challenges” at Transport Canada.

The department says it has made recent changes to the “triage and assessment of files” and incorporated “digital mailing solutions” to respond to users.

Its civil aviation medicine branch is transitioning to digital file reviews in order to improve efficiency and “process applications as quickly as possible,” Ayoun said.