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Canadian Flight Schools

Canada’s flight schools are busy for a number of reaso

Written by James Careless   
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A year ago, Wings magazine reported that Canadian fixedwing flight schools were enjoying healthy enrollments and generally good economic times. Well, 12 months have gone by and the boom is showing no sign of letting up.

How well is the industry doing? “At ATAC 2006 in November, 95% of flight school operators said they were having a very good year, and that they were very busy,” says Dennis Cooper, CEO of Sky Wings Aviation Academy in Red Deer, AB and chairman of ATAC’s flight training committee. “Student enrollments are pretty much up across the board.”

WHAT’S DRIVING THE BOOM?
There are a number of reasons why Canada’s flight schools are busy these days. The first factor is the ongoing departure of ‘baby boomer’ pilots as they hit retirement age. As these pilots leave the major airlines, replacements are hired from regional carriers. In turn, these airlines hire new pilots from air taxi and commuter companies, who then call on flight schools for replacement staff. In addition to pilots retiring, “the airlines are getting bigger,” says Adam Penner, operations manager at Harv’s Air pilot training and air taxi service in St. Andrews, Manitoba. “WestJet continues to expand, and Air Canada seems to be on the mend.”

Then there’s the demand from overseas carriers, especially those in Asia. “These airlines are incredibly short of pilots,” says Emilio Tarsitano, president of Island Air Flight School and Charters, which is based at Toronto City Centre Airport. “According to an article I just read, in China alone they’re shy 9,000 to 12,000 pilots.” Put it all together, and these are good times to find work as a commercial pilot. “We’re seeing a lot of our students getting positions in the air taxi and commuter airlines,” Penner says. “Even those who’ve been sitting on the fence waiting for the industry to pick up are now getting work.” Tarsitano adds: “We’re seeing people who haven’t flown in 4-5 years getting back into the industry. Given how much demand there is out there, I expect this pace of hiring to continue for the next 3-4 years.”

THE SURGE IN INTERNATIONAL ENROLLMENT
Not so long ago, most of the students at Toronto’s Island Air were “local baby boomers with a lot of money to spend, and no reason to fly except for pleasure,” says Tarsitano. “Now that’s changed: the mainstay of our business is international students from India, China and Turkey, learning to fly in order to become commercial pilots.” Says Penner: “The enrollment of international students continues to grow.” At Harv’s Air alone, “we have about 35 students from India right now.” The company also has international students who have come to Manitoba from England and France.

So why are students making the trip to Canadian flight schools? One reason is a lack of flight schools overseas, Penner says. “The demand for pilots is very strong and they just don’t have the infrastructure to quickly and properly train them.” Another reason is cost. “When you look at the flight school market in England and France, it is too expensive for student pilots to train there,” says Cooper of Sky Wings. “Comparatively speaking, learning to fly in Canada is quite affordable. Besides, the weather here is very good for flight training.” For East Indian students, a shared colonial history makes Canada a particularly attractive place to learn. This is because “Canadian flying regulations are very close to British regulations, and India still goes by the British regulations,” Tarsitano says.

Finally, Canada has a very strong reputation for training pilots, Cooper says, one that goes back to World War II and the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan, in which Canada served as a major training base for allied pilots. Penner adds that this reputation can have a very positive effect on a successful student’s career prospects in India. “It’s common for the Indian pilots to leave us and go right from a little twin to a 737. It happens all the time.”

All this demand begs the question: How do international students learn about Canadian flight schools in the first place? In the case of Harv’s Air, “They find us through the Internet and word of mouth,” Penner says. “What happens is that people who were trained here go home happy, then tell their buddies and they attend.” Meanwhile, Island Air’s Tarsitano actively promotes his school overseas. A case in point: “I went to India and made presentations about Island Air in Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore. I advertised in the papers and held the events at local hotels. About 300 in all showed up.” Aiding Tarsitano’s pitch is that Toronto has a thriving East Indian community relatively close to his school. This makes it easy for Indian students to live in a culturally familiar setting while in Canada, minimizing their culture shock and allowing them to focus on learning to fly.

CHALLENGES
Prosperity brings its own problems, as the Canadian flight school industry well knows. One of these is keeping up with demand while struggling to keep instructors on staff. With so many airlines seeking pilots, lots of opportunities are available to instructors wanting to move up.

“The result is that, as soon as my instructors get 1,000- 1,500 hours, they’re gone to bigger jobs,” says Tarsitano. “Before that, it would have taken them 3-4 years to find work as pilots.”

A second challenge is keeping up with technology, both in the cockpit and the classroom. In particular, “there is a lot of interest in the industry to buy new, more advanced simulators to help manage the risk of flying instruction,” says Cooper. “It makes sense: the more hazardous flying that can be taught safely on the ground, the better it is for students and the schools who have to pay for insurance.”

Speaking of insurance costs, the good news is that rates have stayed pretty steady since their post-9/11 jump, says Penner. However, trying to keep up with rollercoaster fuel rates has been a real headache for school owners. “The biggest variable we’ve been dealing with is how high prices went a few months ago, and how low they are right now,” he explains. “It makes it difficult to set our tuition fees, and to quote them for the future.” This said, the fact that insurance rates have been stable means that they have stayed high. This has cut into other forms of revenue generation, says Cooper. “It used to be that schools could rent their twins out at slow times to pilots, who would then rent them on a per-use basis,” he explains. “Thanks to today’s high insurance rates, I don’t know of any schools that would do that now.”

Nav Canada’s decision to charge $10 every time a 3-tonnes-or-less small aircraft uses one of the country’s seven busiest airports (Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto’s Pearson, Ottawa, and Montreal’s Trudeau) is also raising hackles. “The new Nav Canada fee is very annoying,” says Penner. “We used to have to pay on a per-airplane basis, but now the biggest airports are charging per use, which is pushing up our costs. All we can do is to pass on these extra charges to our students, which doesn’t help them pay for their education.”

THE FUTURE STILL LOOKS BRIGHT
These problems notwithstanding, the next few years look good to Canada’s fixedwing flight school operators. Those we spoke to anticipate demand staying strong for the immediate future, as air travel increases and experienced pilots retire.