Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Passenger Advocate Concerned Over New Low-Cost Airline's Lack Of Licence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2016 11:29 AM
    WINNIPEG — An air passenger advocate is raising licensing concerns with Canada's new ultra-low-cost air travel company, NewLeaf.
     
    Halifax-based Gabor Lukacs says people should be alarmed that it's an unlicensed company, saying that leaves passengers with a financial risk.
     
    Recently-launched NewLeaf is partnering with Flair Airlines, based in Kelowna, B.C., to offer cheap flights out of seven smaller airports in five provinces.
     
    NewLeaf, which is based in Winnipeg, agrees the company does not have its own operating licence from the Canadian Transportation Agency.
     
    But NewLeaf president and CEO Jim Young says the company does not need a licence because its operating partner, Flair Airlines, already has a licence from the agency.
     
    Young says Flair aircraft and staff will be used for NewLeaf flights.
     
    “All the same terms and conditions and contracts of carriage exist with Flair as they would exist with NewLeaf,” Young tells CTV News. “We’re selling seats on Flair Airlines as a result of the NewLeaf brand, so customers should have no concerns at all.”
     
    While Lukacs supports more competition in the aviation industry, he says the licensing arrangement between NewLeaf and Flair could leave passengers in financial limbo if baggage gets damaged or lost during a flight sold through NewLeaf, or if the company cancels or delays a flight.
     
     
    “It’s a question of who has commercial control, who sets the schedules, who decides what the terms and conditions are and there are some very practical problems with what we see here, which are quite obvious,” he says.
     
    One of the problems stems from confusion around baggage liability within NewLeaf’s General Conditions of Carriage, says Lukacs.
     
    “They have two separate statements about baggage and liability. One says $750, the other says $1,500. Then go to the bottom of the page and lookup Flair Airlines terms and conditions; they say $250,” says Lukacs. “Now which of them is going to apply? Whichever is best for the airline?”
     
    Chris Lapointe, Flair Airlines' vice-president of commercial operations, says his company is currently working with lawyers and the Canadian Transportation Agency to review Flair’s tariff document, including baggage liabilities.
     
    Lapointe says once the NewLeaf service begins, Flair’s tariff document will be applied.
     
    Jack Branswell with the transportation agency confirms NewLeaf is not required to have its own licence during the review, but says that could change.
     
    “While this review is underway, the agency will not require companies such as NewLeaf, who bulk purchase all seats on planes and then resell those seats to the public, to apply for a licence,” Branswell writes in an email to CTV News.
     
    “The agency will continue to carefully monitor this issue. Should NewLeaf's business model evolve into that of an air carrier, the agency will require NewLeaf to hold the appropriate licence.”
     
    NewLeaf Travel is promising non-stop trips beginning on Feb. 12, with flights running out of airports in Nova Scotia, Ontario, B.C., Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Flights will cost between $89 and $149, which includes all airline fees and additional taxes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Mine Cuts Back Because Of Low Copper Prices, Lays Off 100 Workers

    B.C. Mine Cuts Back Because Of Low Copper Prices, Lays Off 100 Workers
    The Vancouver-based company — which also owns the Mount Polley and Red Chris  mines — said it has suspended pit operations at Huckleberry but will continue milling stockpiled ore.

    B.C. Mine Cuts Back Because Of Low Copper Prices, Lays Off 100 Workers

    ! Cities Voiced Opposition To Federally Run Homeless Count, Documents Show

    ! Cities Voiced Opposition To Federally Run Homeless Count, Documents Show
    OTTAWA — The federal government is moving ahead this month with a nationally co-ordinated count of homeless people across Canada, despite opposition from cities worried that the timing would lead to inaccurate results.

    ! Cities Voiced Opposition To Federally Run Homeless Count, Documents Show

    Bizarre Crime Spree Sparked By Theft Of Stolen Jeep Outside Kamloops, B.C.

    RCMP say that several hours after the vehicle was taken, a man noticed someone driving his brother's pickup truck east of the city, with a Jeep right behind it.

    Bizarre Crime Spree Sparked By Theft Of Stolen Jeep Outside Kamloops, B.C.

    B.C. Premier Calls Byelections To Replace 2 Metro Vancouver MLAs

    Feb. 2 votes were called Tuesday by Clark for Vancouver-Mount Pleasant and Coquitlam-Burke Mountain, ridings left vacant last summer when Jenny Kwan and Doug Horne decided to run in the federal election.

    B.C. Premier Calls Byelections To Replace 2 Metro Vancouver MLAs

    B.C. Woman Killed After Her SUV Slid Off Highway 97 Into Okanagan Lake

    B.C. Woman Killed After Her SUV Slid Off Highway 97 Into Okanagan Lake
    RCMP say the woman was driving on the lake-side highway between Penticton and Summerland when the accident happened.

    B.C. Woman Killed After Her SUV Slid Off Highway 97 Into Okanagan Lake

    Legalizing Pot In Canada Will Run Afoul Of Global Treaties, Justin Trudeau Warned

    Legalizing Pot In Canada Will Run Afoul Of Global Treaties, Justin Trudeau Warned
    Justin Trudeau's plan to legalize, regulate and restrict access to marijuana is already proving a complicated and controversial undertaking on the domestic front, in part because it requires working with the provinces.

    Legalizing Pot In Canada Will Run Afoul Of Global Treaties, Justin Trudeau Warned