The National Airlines Council of Canada, representing Canada’s largest national and international airlines (Air Canada, Air Transat, Jazz Aviation and WestJet), released a statement by president and CEO Mike McNaney concerning the Ontario government’s call for additional measures concerning international travel.
The Council supports Premier Ford’s call for mandatory testing upon arrival, saying they, “have been very vocal proponents of testing and along with our airport partners have driven the launch of testing programs at major airports to support the development of a clear federal testing strategy that is science-based and tied to quarantine and border measures.”
They note the federal government’s statement that “an extraordinary small number of cases are due to international travel.”
However, they suggest that since last winter break service internationally has been cut by 90% or more and domestic service overall has been cut by more than 80%, therefore, “layering on a second test upon arrival in addition to contact tracing, and enforcement of public health measures negates the need to adopt “mandatory quarantine hotels” as public health data shows that approximately 99% of positive COVID cases are not travel related.”
Testing on arrival such as has been undertaken in the Albrta pilot programme, and at Pearson International in Toronto, says the council provides a highly effective platform to successfully identify and manage any travel related cases.
“While governments at all levels continue to recognize the need for aviation to continue to operate, we cannot do so without passengers. As additional measures continue to be considered, we need the federal government to engage with industry and labour on the development of such measures,” the statement says.
“As the crisis in aviation deepens, the federal government must move rapidly to provide sectoral support to the industry – we remain the only G7 nation that has not provided targeted support yet the federal government routinely expresses disappointment and frustration when services are cut as carriers try to remain viable. As we face potentially irreparable damage, the government needs to address sectoral support immediately so that carriers can play the role they must play in supporting the hundreds of thousands of jobs across the country and the economy that are impacted by aviation, and continue to support supply chains.”