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Flight School Strip

Quebec’s St-Hubert Airport is a Haven for Student Pilo

Written by Carroll McCormick   
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With four flight schools operating cheek by jowl, an almost zero block-out time onto what is essentially a dedicated GA runway, and with little other competing traffic, the St-Hubert airport (CYHU) on Montreal’s south shore is a student’s dream come true.

“We have all the IFR approach procedures and a controlled airport without a lot of commercial traffic. Everything is the same as [Trudeau Airport at Dorval], without the big airplanes. That makes it easier for us. All the planes go the same speed,” explains Thierry Dugrippe, director and manager of Air Richelieu, one of the flying schools. There are three runways: 24R/06L (7,840'); 24L/06R, (3,920'); and 28/10 (2,800').

Many students come from western Europe, the Middle East, Asia and South America, drawn by the quality of instruction, bargain-basement course fees compared to those at home and access to airspace; e.g., Montreal overflights that make the Old World look positively two-dimensional.

The phone rings constantly at the front desk at Air Richelieu. Beyond the lobby’s glass walls, a Piaggio Avanti and a Cessna 172 make a simultaneous approach on the parallel runways. Upstairs is the Café bistro de l’aeroport, complete with couches on the terrace and great airside view.

Flight instructor and director of marketing and commercial affairs, Francois Gardes – an expat from France – unrolls diagrams of the school’s expansion plans: The size of the building will be doubled in length to 88.3x40 feet, and the project includes getting two Alsim 200 multicrew cockpit 180-degree flight simulators. They will simulate the Cessna 172, Piper Seminole, Piper Navajo turboprop, the King Air 200 and Citation S.

“We will use them when people are training for a Pilot Proficiency Check. Before, the checks were done on the actual planes, but since Transport Canada allows 50% of the training to be done on a simulator, Air Richelieu can train company pilots. It is less expensive,” Gardes explains. “We will have some contracts with airlines outside the country, and recurrent training for air taxi operators.”

Air Richelieu already has an Alsim 50 for IFR training, and 15 aircraft, including a Cessna 150, 172N, 172R, 172SP, Katana D20-C1, Piper warrior, Piper Seminole and Piper Navajo. The school does some Department of National Defence training; for example, it expects to get about 20 air cadets next spring. “We have a contract with the space agency to give recurrent training for pilots working there. Students from the École nationale d'aérotechnique come here to fly,” Dugrippe adds.

French, English, Russian and Spanish are the languages of instruction. “Students from Brazil and Colombia come here because there are not that many schools and visas for the US are difficult to get,” DuGrippe explains. “It is the same for the Russian students.”

Close by is the Saint- Hubert Flying School, which opened in March 2005. Owner and chief instructor Mohammed Hamdi has been teaching since 1995, and two more Class 1 and two Class 2 instructors round out the staff. Training courses range from those for recreational licences on up to commercial, multiengine, IFR and nighttime flying.

In September Hamdi took possession of a single-position MAP 101 flight simulator built by Montreal AeroPlus. It uses both Elite and Microsoft flight simulation software for Transport Canada-certified Level 2 IFR training that counts as flight time, and uncertified VFR training using visual databases, respectively.

The MAP is currently programmed to simulate the Cessna 152, 172 and Seneca PA34 aircraft in the school fleet. “But you can add any type of aircraft,” Hamdi notes. From a two-screen console behind the student the instructor creates training exercises; e.g., weather, engine failures and landing gear and air navigation system malfunctions.

Hamdi’s students come from all over the world, and the school’s languages of instruction include English, French, German, Spanish and Arabic. “They come here and get all the ratings we have to offer, then go home. They also come to upgrade their licences for more challenging weather conditions. The best thing about training in Canada is the weather, Hamdi says. ”Some certified commercial airline pilots flying into Canada have never seen snow before.”

Hamdi regularly takes students to the maintenance shop next door and to the control tower. “When students come back here they have a big smile, because they know what is happening. This visit helps them feel comfortable and safe. The students talk to the controllers, learn what the controllers would like to expect from them.”

The market for pilots is changing, says Hamdi. “I used to have instructors who couldn’t find jobs, but lately there are a lot of job openings. The demand overseas is booming. In Canada graduates have to start up north, for example, but the market is opening up and the demand for pilots in Canada is rising. When you finish from here with 200-250 hours, you can get a job with a company working at a type rating, as a copilot until you accumulate 1,500 hours to get the Air Transport Pilot’s Licence.”

Another newcomer to Airport Road is CPAQ.AERO, which opened in October 2005. Wedged between a glass-walled restaurant called L’Aviateur, with an apron-side view, and the Air Quasar maintenance shop, nonstop tower-pilot chatter burbles out of a radio on a window ledge as instructors and students bustle about.

Company vice-president and Class 1 instructor Eric Raissac feels its two GPSequipped, two-seat Katana DA20-C1s give the school an edge. “The Katanas are wellappreciated.” The school has two Cessna 172s, one of which is IFR-capable and GPSequipped and two Cessna 152s, one of which is long-range, and a two-seat Elite 5 simulator. The school trains students in English and French for all sorts of licences and the school is near a decision point on getting a multi-engine plane with IFR.

“Montreal is a huge reservoir of people,” says Raissac, who notes that there are not many schools in the region for the population. About 10% of his students, and growing, come from out of country. There are six instructors between the Saint-Hubert School and CPAQ.AERO’s other school in St-Jean-sur- Richelieu.

Raissac, who has been a commercial pilot for 15 years, feels the pull of the strong market for pilots, having lost two instructors in the last year. “There is a shortage of pilots at Air Canada, WestJet ... There is a knock-on effect in smaller companies. There is a shortage of instructors. It used to be that instructors stayed at a school three or four years, earning 2,000 hours before hoping to get a job. Now you can get a job with less than 1,000 hours,” he explains. For a newly graduated pilot with a commercial licence, Raissac suggests some possibilities. “Become an instructor or work as a fire patroller looking for forest fires. Or you can fly a parachute plane.”

A blue and white King Air turboprop is parked just a few feet outside the airside entrance to the Max Aviation flying school. The lobby, outfitted with earth-tone tiles on the floor and back wall, complemented with rich blue trim details and a wood-paneled reception desk, symbolizes the bush and fishing camps that are the 1960s roots of the Prud’homme family business.

This is home base for the flying school and Cargair Ltd., a charter company. The school has eight Cessna 150s and eight 172s, two Piper Aztec PA23s and two Navajo PA-31s. All are GPS-equipped and some of the Cessnas are IFR-equipped. One Aztec and both Navajos have de-icing ‘boots’ on the wings.

Students use an Elite 6.0 simulator to train on all of the school’s aircraft types, as well as Cargair’s King Air turboprop. There are 16 instructors, ranging from Class 1 to 4. The chief instructor, Lorraine Dumont, has 16,000 hours of flight instruction. The languages of instruction are English and French.

“We currently have over 100 students at the two schools [the other one is in Mascouche], and over 80 of the active students are at St-Hubert,” says Josée Prud’homme as she sweeps papers left and right to clear a patch of desk for her visitor. Vice-president of Max Aviation, she gave up her previous job as a corporate lawyer – but not her need for speed – in a big Montreal firm to replace her brother, who left the family company to fly with Airbus. “France, Switzerland, Tunisia are three big sources for students. We made a count the other day and we have representatives from 14 different countries.”

Max Aviation recently became one of only 12 schools around the world accredited by CAAC (General Administration of Civil Aviation of China) to train Chinese pilots. “It is a very difficult, long, expensive process to get this accreditation” says Prud’homme.

The school offers every type of certification, including becoming qualified in the King Air. “You don’t learn to fly in the King Air, but if you want to check out on it as a licensed pilot, you can; you cannot be accredited by the Chinese if you do not have highperformance aircraft.”

As for the job prospects for new pilots, Prud’homme says: “Right now they are very good. Aviation is very cyclical, but we are in a couple of years when it is very good. People are missing pilots everywhere, from small companies to big companies around the world. It is the time to graduate.”