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Drew McCarthy McCarthy: Which Way to Downtown?
Written by Drew McCarthy   
Start-up airlines face formidable challenges. High capital investment, rapidly changing markets and intense competition can rattle all but the most intrepid entrepreneurs. But starting a new airline in the face of environmental review challenges, injunction battles and intense city hall opposition, just so you can take on the country’s largest airline right in its own backyard, well, that’s just crazy. Isn’t it?

We‘re about to find out, as Robert Deluce’s Porter Airlines Inc. plans to start service from Toronto City Centre Airport (YTZ) this fall. Civic opposition to the airline and YTZ expansion has been strong. Deluce’s last attempt at the project became the most important issue in Toronto’s 2003 municipal election. On election night, Toronto mayor David Miller hoisted a broom over his head to symbolize his impending “clean sweep of city hall.” The fixed link between the island airport and the city proper was one of the first projects to be whisked away. In response to the cancellation, Deluce threatened legal action. When all was said and done, Miller’s cleaning frenzy had cost Canadian taxpayers $35 million.

Now two-and-a-half-years later Deluce is making another run at it. The idea that reinvigorated economic activity at the island airport could ever help the city financially seems foreign to the downtown politicos. A mostly unsympathetic Toronto media has shied away from reporting that REGCO (Porter Airlines Inc.’s parent company) has estimated that 500 jobs will be created at the island airport, and $800 million in economic benefits a year will be generated downtown. And, the Bombardier Q-400s, which will make up Porter’s fleet, are being built in Downsview.

Yet, a local interest group, CommunityAir, claims the airline will benefit only “a handful of private interests” and the area’s NDP MP, Olivia Chow, wants the federal government to transfer control of the airport lands to the city. CommunityAir has complained about potential air and noise pollution, but the Q-400 is a clean aircraft with noise levels that fall well below FAR 36 and ICAO Annex 16 Ch 3. requirements. What’s more, it has reduced engine emissions at 40% below Part 34 requirements for smoke number and 40% below ICAO Annex 16 requirements for gaseous emission.

CommunityAir says Porter should set up shop at Pearson. They argue that the planned rail link, Blue22, connecting Pearson to Union Station, renders the island airport unnecessary. Blue22 is scheduled to begin operation between 2008 and 2010, but it too has run up against civic opposition. Rallying behind the slogan, “Kill Blue22!” a group called the Weston Community Coalition is fighting the project.

It’s been estimated that Blue22 could eliminate up to 1.5 million car trips annually. How many of those trips could also be eliminated by Porter’s operations? What percentage of travellers would no longer be sitting in single-passenger taxis or private vehicles, idling in polluting gridlock? Moving travellers efficiently from airport to downtown benefits everyone. In Toronto, there are two distinct ways of doing it. Blue22 is one of them, Porter is the other. They should both fly.