Shortening airport runway not negotiable: city expects
Ottawa to come through on Jack Garland runway
resurfacing.
by Ross, Ian
North Bay mayor Vic Fedeli wants Ottawa to upgrade local
transportation infrastructure, not help tear it up.
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Fedeli is heading a local task group of city and airport staff to
make a pitch for federal funding to help resurface the 10,000-foot
runway at Jack Garland Airport this year.
It's been a long-standing issue to get the runway resurfaced.
Though the runway remains in good shape, airport officials say after
more than 20 years, a new surface is necessary to keep the entire length
of runway intact.
Fedeli says the cost to pave the runway is about $5 million,
roughly the same as the federal government offered to tear it up and
reduce it to 6,500 feet.
"That's a non-starter," says Fedeli of the latter
option. 'They'll be barricades up there. We're not
letting anybody shorten that runway"
With the aid of the Department of Defence, national and
international airlines, the city is building a case for funding to
Transport Canada and any sympathetic ear in Ottawa within the next six
months.
"No doubt in my mind, it should be resurfaced not torn up,
it's a very important economic development tool that's unique
in the North," says Fedeli.
In the late 1990s, when airports were turned over to the
municipalities to operate, Ottawa set up a funding program for local
authorities to apply for infrastructure improvement money.
However, under the Airport Capital Assistance Program, North Bay
doesn't qualify for resurfacing the entire 10,000 feet. The feds
are only willing to pay for 6,500 feet, since the largest aircraft
regularly landing at Jack Garland is a Dash 8 turboprop.
But Jack Garland is vital to air traffic controllers in Toronto and
Montreal. It serves as an emergency landing strip for Boeing 747s and
Airbus 340s when aircraft are diverted because of severe weather
conditions or during emergencies, such as the September 11, 2001 U.S.
terrorist attacks or the Air France crash at Toronto's Pearson
Airport in 2005.
In March, seven domestic and international flights were diverted to
North Bay because of snowstorms in Toronto and Ottawa.
North Bay is one of only four airports in Ontario with a runway
length of 10,000 feet along with Toronto, Ottawa and Hamilton.
The military-length strip was once the home of 414 Fighter Squadron
at CFB North Bay before the unit pulled out in 1992.
Fedeli says shortening the runway hurts any future growth plans to
land heavy-lift aircraft or continue with winter testing of aircraft.
The airport has hosted Russian cargo aircraft and has a history of
serving as a flight test venue for the Dash 8-400s and the Global
Express corporate jet.
NASA has also conducted winter friction testing for eight years and
Pratt & Whitney have brought aircraft with test engines to North
Bay.
Fedeli says it's an avenue the airport corporation and city
wants to promote internationally.
For aerospace companies and agencies, Jack Garland is an ideal
facility. There's unrestricted 24-hour access, dedicated flight
test corridors and all the services available for emergencies.
Fedeli says Ottawa isn't recognizing the aircraft Jack
Garland's services during those emergency diverts. "They
don't acknowledge the specialty services that utilize the full
10,000 (feet)."
www.northbayairport.com
By IAN ROSS
Northern Ontario Business
COPYRIGHT 2008 Laurentian Business Publishing,
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.