Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Record Holiday Travellers Could Cause Delays At Canadian Airports

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Dec, 2017 01:11 PM
    MONTREAL — Canadian holiday travellers should brace for crowds and delays as a record number of passengers are expected to pass through the country's largest airports and highways are filled with Christmas commuters.
     
     
    With Air Canada and rival WestJet Airlines carrying 7.9 and 9.7 per cent more passengers for the first nine months of the year, the 2017 Christmas season should break travel records, said airline analyst Robert Kokonis of AirTrav Inc.
     
     
    "This bodes well for the rest of the year and, I believe, into Christmas and Winter 2018 periods," he wrote in an email.
     
     
    Toronto Pearson International Airport expects that nearly 2.7 million passengers will travel through the country's largest airport between Dec. 17 and Jan. 7, up from 1.9 million last year when there were fewer days of elevated traffic. 
     
     
    The busiest travel day leading into the holiday will be Thursday when more than 130,000 people are expected to use the airport.
     
     
    On average, 50,000 to 60,000 passengers are expected to depart and arrive at Trudeau International Airport in Montreal and more than one million over the season.
     
     
    Traffic this year is up about 10 per cent on the year as carriers have added new direct flights, particularly to international destinations.
     
     
     
    "We will have a growth this year in passenger traffic for the holiday period and we will welcome our 18 millionth passenger," said airport spokeswoman Anne-Sophie Hamel.
     
     
    Forecast for heavy snow in the days leading up to Christmas could cause some delays but Montreal Trudeau is used to facing Quebec winters, she said.
     
     
    "Our snow clearing teams are active to ensure that when there is more difficult weather, these impacts are limited for passengers."
     
     
    Vancouver and Calgary airports are forecasting the 2017 will be another record season.
     
     
     
     
    "We anticipate our busiest days to be when school gets out and the week after Christmas," said airport spokeswoman Andrea Pham.
     
     
    Canadian Airports Council president Daniel-Robert Gooch said he expects a strong end to a booming year since airport traffic is outpacing economic growth.
     
     
    "It's a very good news story for the air transport business and local economies and tourism," he said in an interview.
     
     
    Air Canada and WestJet Airlines said they are both expecting higher passenger volumes during the peak travel period but refused to provide forecasts. WestJet said it expects to beat the record 74,000 passengers it carried one day before Christmas last year.
     
     
    The airlines offered advice such as checking in online or through an app, paying for any baggage fees in advance, verifying flight status for any delays, arriving early at the airport and carrying the appropriate identification.
     
     
    Roads will also be busy this holiday as extra vehicles and snow cause delays while longer wait times are expected to cross the U.S. border.
     
     
     
    "The best advice is to simply realize that things are going to be moving more slowly and they're going to be busier than they usually are and so leave extra time," said CAA spokesman Ian Jack.
     
     
    Travelling through the United States could also take more time since the American Automobile Association expects a record 107.3 million holiday road and air travellers.
     
     
    The Canadian agency overseeing airport screening said it will add more workers to help meet heightened demand over the holiday, especially for peak travel days.
     
     
    "When it's really busy, passengers should be there ahead of time because the lineups can be longer," said Mathieu Larocque, spokesman for the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority.
     
     
    He said travellers can shorten security inspections by ensuring they know what can be carried on board the plane, especially in carry-on luggage.
     
     
    Passengers can ask questions of CATSA on Twitter or Facebook and send pictures of items to avoid surprises at the airport.
     
     
    Gifts should remain unwrapped for easier inspection if required. Some airports offer post-security wrapping services.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    False killer whale is latest cetacean to die at Vancouver Aquarium

    False killer whale is latest cetacean to die at Vancouver Aquarium
    Chester was estimated to be just weeks old when he was found stranded on a beach near Tofino, B.C., in July 2014. 

    False killer whale is latest cetacean to die at Vancouver Aquarium

    B.C. city, homeless campers agree to work together to solve safety concerns

    B.C. city, homeless campers agree to work together to solve safety concerns
    Maple Ridge is the latest B.C. municipality to struggle with homeless camps.

    B.C. city, homeless campers agree to work together to solve safety concerns

    Fuel-laden barge drops anchor after it was adrift of B.C.'s central coast

    Fuel-laden barge drops anchor after it was adrift of B.C.'s central coast
    The barge is the Zidell Marine 277, also registered in the U.S., and it is loaded with 3.5 million litres of diesel and 468,000 litres of gasoline.

    Fuel-laden barge drops anchor after it was adrift of B.C.'s central coast

    Amarinder Singh Slams Foreign Governments For Stand On Terror Suspect Jagtar Singh Johal's Arrest

    Amarinder Singh Slams Foreign Governments For Stand On Terror Suspect Jagtar Singh Johal's Arrest
    As for allegations of Johal's torture by Punjab Police, Amarinder said these foreign governments had no evidence of what they were claiming.

    Amarinder Singh Slams Foreign Governments For Stand On Terror Suspect Jagtar Singh Johal's Arrest

    Parliament's $5.6m Skating Rink To Stay Open Until End Of February

    Parliament's $5.6m Skating Rink To Stay Open Until End Of February
    A $5.6-million skating rink constructed on the east lawn of Parliament Hill will remain open to the public until the end of February — not just for three weeks as initially planned.

    Parliament's $5.6m Skating Rink To Stay Open Until End Of February

    Halifax Murder Trial Shown Video Of Compost Bin Allegedly Used To Dispose Of Cop's Body

    Halifax Murder Trial Shown Video Of Compost Bin Allegedly Used To Dispose Of Cop's Body
    The Crown has alleged Christopher Garnier killed Truro police Const. Catherine Campbell at an apartment on McCully Street in the early hours of Sept. 11, 2015, and used a green bin to dispose of her body near Halifax's Macdonald Bridge.

    Halifax Murder Trial Shown Video Of Compost Bin Allegedly Used To Dispose Of Cop's Body