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ATAC Meeting
Written by James Careless   
363“Competing Mandates and Conflicting Visions:” That’s the theme of this year’s Air Transport Association of Canada annual general meeting and trade show. Scheduled to be held at the Fairmont Empress Hotel and Victoria Conference Centre Nov. 5-7 in BC’s capital, this ATAC meeting has an ambitious goal – to spotlight the competing agendas of Canada’s aerospace players, and the reasons why they need to start working together more closely.

“Airports, Nav Canada, CATSA, Transport Canada, and the airlines are all component parts of our commercial aviation system,” says Fred Gaspar, ATAC’s vice-president of policy and strategic planning. “Yet, rather than working together toward a common goal – the best service of the fare-paying passenger – they often put their own interests first.”

A case in point: “Airports tend to view themselves as businesses, with airlines only ranking as one of many suppliers,” Gaspar says. “As a result, they have been going ahead with expansion projects that outstrip the airlines’ ability to pay, rather than keeping their expenses in line with what the industry can afford.”

In the same vein, Nav Canada’s “narrow mandate” keeps it from considering the impact of its rate increases on airline traffic, says Gaspar. It doesn’t help that “Nav Canada isn’t required to set its rates in relation to what the commercial aviation market can bear.”

And, Gaspar continues, “although CATSA’s mandate is rightfully focused on delivering security services, we see no reason why they can’t be mandated to be more accountable to airline operational requirements. At the end of the day, all screening operations have to make sense, from a commercial and safety perspective.” As for Transport Canada? “Their policy framework does not place priority on the needs of the travelling public.”

Finally, there are the airlines. With passengers obsessed with getting the cheapest flights possible while grousing about reductions to in-flight amenities, “airlines are caught trying to find the right equilibrium point between price and service,” says Gaspar. “Since they can’t do anything about the price of fuel, airlines have been turning themselves inside out to deliver the low fares customers demand.”

This is where the full title of this year’s ATAC general meeting comes in – “Competing Mandates and Conflicting Visions: Examining the Interdependence of Canada’s Commercial Aviation Space.” ATAC wants all components that serve Canadian air passengers to pay more attention to their need for each other; and start working together toward a common goal of serving passengers first.

This year’s plenary session (on Monday Nov. 6, between 10 and 11:30 am) will take up this discussion in earnest. “We hope that this session will create more awareness of this problem, and get people talking about the issue and to start moving toward resolving it,” Gasper says. “If this happens, it will be a step in the right direction for all players, and the paying passengers we all serve.”

ATAC will be offering advice on the federal government’s plans to reform airport governance. “This reform is a tacit acknowledgment that there is no accountability by airports to anyone,” says Gaspar. “We have many tangible ideas for changing the current legislation, such as allowing airlines to appeal the fees that the airports currently impose on them.”

ATAC has set its sights high for the 2006 AGM. What matters most is the need for airports, Nav Canada, CATSA, Transport Canada and the carriers to come together for the common good. “We’re here to serve the flying public who buy tickets,” says Gaspar. “This must be paramount in our minds, whatever our individual mandates and agendas.”