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Canadian MROS

Good Times Continue, But Challenges Remain

Written by James Careless   
349-mros











The good times are continuing for the Canadian MRO (Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul) industry, with MROs of all sizes reporting overall strong sales and full hangars.

“I’ve had one of the busiest years since I took over the business,” says Glen Latour, president and maintenance director at Glen’s TerryAir in Centralia, Ontario. “I don’t see any end to it in sight.”

“It’s busy,” says Terry Hope, president of Hope Aero Propeller and Components in Mississauga, Ontario. “Granted, the work’s not steady; we’ll go from very little to a whole bunch. But still, overall, it’s busy.”

“Although the new year was soft – and I don’t know why it was – business has been strong since March,” says Barry Aylward, president of Kitchener Aero in Kitchener, Ontario. “In particular, we’re retrofitting a lot of new avionics into a number of older aircraft.”

“Montreal’s ExelTech Aerospace became a thirdparty MRO in 2000, when management at InterCanadian Airlines bought out this regional carrier’s maintenance division,” says Derek Nice, Exeltech’s president and CEO. “Since that time, we’ve grown our business 60 per cent annually, and expanded substantially into the global market, so yes; the good times are continuing.”

In fact, 80-85 per cent of the work in ExelTech’s 230,000 square feet of hangar space is performed for non-Canadian clients. “Our biggest customers are American Eagle (the American Airlines feeder), Piedmont (US Airways feeder), and Atlantic Southwest Airlines (Delta feeder),” says Nice. “We are also by far the largest supplier of maintenance services to the Caribbean, plus we also serve Europe, Hawaii, and Russia. Domestically, we do all of the heavy maintenance on CanJet’s 737s. We also do work for Air Canada, Air Canada Jazz, and Air Quebec.”

What’s Driving Business
Ask MROs why business is good, and you’ll receive a wide range of answers. “I don’t know what’s driving it; certainly not the low price of gas,” says Glen Latour. “Perhaps it’s because a lot of AMEs are retiring, and there’s not enough people to take their place.”

“As the commuter turboprop fleets get older, their propellers are requiring servicing,” says Terry Hope. “That’s certainly helping our business.”

At ExelTech Aerospace in Montreal, Derek Nice credits his company’s success to a combination of quality work, top customer service, and competitive prices when compared to other MROs; especially those based in the U.S. “We work extensively with our international customers to reduce the cost of brining their aircraft to us. This means that we help deal with Customs, to smooth the way for bringing in their planes and parts.”

But There’s Always Something
Even with the continuing good times, Canada’s MROs find themselves grappling with a number of serious challenges.

Of these, finding the right technicians – and enough of them – to service aircraft “is a real problem,” says Kitchener Aero’s Aylward. “The shortage has been going on for a while, due to technicians being attracted to other fields for higher pay. Ironically, our biggest problem has been Transport Canada. They’ve been the biggest poacher around here, although we’ve been losing people to Air Canada and Bombardier as well.”

Glen’s TerryAir’s Latour agrees. “It’s really tough to find people with a good work ethic and a willingness to do the job right,” he says. As for retaining good staff? “All we can do to keep good people is to pay and benefit them really well, and do whatever we can to make this a good place to work,” Aylward says.

On the customer side of the business: “Education is a real issue, especially when it comes to understanding the value of preventive maintenance,” says Terry Hope. “Take propeller overhauls: They used to occur every five years, until Transport Canada agreed to let them extend to ten-year periods, with inspections in between. Well, those who know about propeller corrosion will tell you that letting overhauls go this long doesn’t really save you money, because there’s more repair work needed every ten years than every five. Meanwhile, you’re flying on propellers which may have significant corrosion, which cuts into your margin of safety.”

Then there’s the healthy Canadian dollar. For MROs with a lot of international customers, the declining value of the US dollar – down from $1.60 Canadian in January 2002 to about $1.09 today – has really eaten into their bottom lines. “We’re paid in US dollars, so when their value goes down against the Canadian dollar, we get paid less,” says Nice. To put this in context, a repair job worth US$100,000 would have netted ExelTech $160,000 in 2002, compared to $109,000 now.

“Unfortunately, the vast majority of our clients expect our pricing to be in US dollars, so there’s no way to recoup these losses by charging in Canadian,” he adds. “To offset these losses, we work very hard to constantly improve our productivity and our efficiency.”

At the same time, “fuel costs are a real issue for international customers flying to our facility,” says Donald Kamenz, Exeltech’s VP of sales and marketing. “We also find ourselves dealing with a high degree of seasonality. Airlines like to keep their planes flying in the summer and over Christmas, which means keeping them out of the shop for those periods. That complicates our cash flow.”

Increased airport security is a headache for MROs such as Arado Aero. It’s a Spruce Grove, Alberta company that travels to client aircraft rather than expecting clients to come to them.

“We provide structural repairs and modification services throughout the west and north,” says Arado Aero GM Chuck Teschke. “Unfortunately, it’s getting harder and harder to get our tool kits through airport security in a reasonable length of time. In the old days, airport security knew us and would wave us through with our toolkits. Now, they stop us and go through them in detail, even though they still know who we are.”

The airport security bottleneck has become so bad for Arado Aero that this MRO has taken to driving to its clients’ planes whenever possible. “Anywhere within six hours’ drive of our facility – that’s as far away as Medicine Hat – is handled by sending out a truck, rather than flying in personnel,” Teschke says. “It’s just faster.”

Looking Ahead
Even with these factors, the MROs contacted by WINGS were generally upbeat about the industry, and their places in it. “The future looks good,” says Glen Latour.

Still, the continuing shortage of skilled labour plus the declining US dollar is taking its toll. It’s not enough to kill the good times, but it is putting the brakes on them a bit.