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One on One with Ward Pike

Vice-President and COO of Air Labrador

Written by Darren Locke   
Interviewed in St. John’s, Newfoundland, Sept. 25, 2005.

298-labWITH TOMORROW’S INTRODUCTION OF A NEW DASH 8 TO YOUR FLEET AND YOUR CORRESPONDING INTRODUCTION OF SERVICE TO MONCTON FROM GOOSE BAY AND LABRADOR WEST, TOMORROW IS SURE TO BE A LANDMARK DAY FOR AIR LABRADOR. WHEN YOU LOOK AT YOUR COMPANY’S DEVELOPMENT SINCE IT STARTED IN GANDER AS NEWFOUNDLAND AIRWAYS IN 1948, HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THE JOURNEY SO FAR FOR AIR LABRADOR?
Some people call it the “second coming” of Air Labrador. It’s the second coming of Newfoundland Airways in a way, because Newfoundland Airways gave birth to Eastern Provincial Airlines, and also gave birth to Air Nova. And it’s the same routes, the same origins, the same fundamental basis of Coastal Labrador hinterland flying operations, where true aviation takes place, giving birth to greater regional success.

In terms of the growth of the company right now, the company is very, very poised and has a very slow and strategically minded manner of growing towards the needs of what’s left in Eastern Canada. It’s not our aim to upset any particular leader in the marketplace, or to try and reinvent the wheel, but to look at where the needs really are in the marketplace in Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador, and the Maritimes. You’ve noticed in terms of our route expansion and growth that the routes that we’re travelling on aren’t necessarily the ones that come to mind, or hadn’t come to mind from a lot of other airlines. While we do have a local competitor that does mimic everything that we do, we try to do a lot of market research, and see where the needs really exist in Eastern Canada.

In terms of our new, latest routing into Moncton, the Magdalene Islands, the ‘Maggies’, really have driven this. There was the demise of another carrier in Eastern Canada called Quebec Air Express, and we jumped in to pick up some of their personnel and some of the routes that they were flying, and increase capacity on some routes that we shared with them, shared as competitors of course. The Magdalene Islands was one (situation) where they were the only alternative to Air Canada’s Jazz operation. And the natural progression was to just duplicate what Air Canada was doing – fly Montreal, Quebec City, Gaspe, and the Maggies. We did enough research into it to discover that a lot of the business and government and community needs were grounded in Quebec City, but also in Moncton, and not so much in Gaspé. So by offering a service that connected Montreal and Quebec City into Moncton and Gaspé, we’re able to offer sort of a parallel product to Air Canada Jazz … . If we can offer something to the marketplace that varies slightly, and adds value to the aviation industry as well as the consumers of aviation services, then we’ve done our job.

WHAT ABOUT THE ADDITION OF AIR LABRADOR’S NEW 0655 DEPARTURE FROM WABUSH TO MONTREAL? IS THIS A SOLID INDICATOR OF HOW FAST THE ECONOMY IS DEVELOPING IN LABRADOR AS NEW INDUSTRIES LIKE THE VOISEY’S BAY MINING MEGAPROJECT AND THE IOC (IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA) ENHANCEMENTS COME ON STREAM?

Certainly, we pay attention to what’s happening in the economy of any region that we fly into. The Central Labrador and the Western Labrador economies are very, very telling in terms of what we will do in the future. What’s happening in Labrador West right now, including Fermont, Quebec is more significant than what’s happening in Central Labrador and Goose Bay. With IOC putting this enormous investment into their operations in Labrador West, and there being real growth in the iron ore industry, and the product that they’re after having increased so much in value, especially with the incoming demand from the Chinese market, there is increased demand for flight services into Labrador West, and we’re responding to it … and we’re already seeing results from this on our morning departure to Sept- Iles and Montreal.

IN 1983 YOUR FAMILY BECAME 100% OWNERS OF AIR LABRADOR VIA PROVINCIAL INVESTMENT’S PURCHASE OF THE AIRLINE AND ITS ASSOCIATED COMPANY, LABRADOR AVIATION SERVICES. WHY DID YOUR FAMILY AND MORE PARTICULARLY YOUR FATHER DECIDE TO TAKE A GAMBLE IN BUYING AIR LABRADOR?

At the time it wasn’t so much a gamble, it was a solid business that just needed to be run more like a business and less like a social program, and it was all centred in and operated only in Labrador at the time. What my father (Roger Pike) did was exercise a certain panache for business dealings and for refining operations that was handed down from his father, and of course he schooled me in it as well. It’s something that goes back generation upon generation – we’ve been able to control costs, and still get the job done, to the point where we operate an airline that flies a certain number of people and a certain amount of cargo, and comparable operations need twice the aircraft and three times the personnel to do the same job. There’s no other airline that’s as efficient as ours is. That might come as quite a bold statement to the face of people who run discount airlines, but I can only tell you this – we’ve been in business since 1948. We’re one of the oldest successfully operating airlines in North America. I wouldn’t be surprised if now we’re considered the most successful. It’s been said to me by a couple of US publications that we are the longest airline in operation without a bankruptcy, liquidation, or any serious condition taking place.

DO YOU THINK TOMORROW’S SERVICE EXPANSIONS BY AIR LABRADOR TRULY DEMONSTRATE YOUR STAYING POWER IN THIS INDUSTRY?

Base of operations, in a diversified group of companies. The airline itself has maintained good cost controls, and tries to maximize revenue sources on each individual product. It also moves very slowly. We could have easily expanded our fleet three or four times as quickly as we have over the last two years, and our number of flights and our operations. But instead of doing it that way and jumping at every opportunity, we’ve decided to maintain our omnipresent attitude of working very slowly towards a much larger picture, a much larger goal. That in itself means that you don’t have to do incredible restructuring or a difficult financial restructuring, or to engage in various large-scale capitalization schemes, but instead maintain a sensible, albeit slim for an industry, margin. And continue with current account financing. You can only grow as fast as the profits you make.

Jetsgo is not the only example of growth exceeding profits. There are many airlines that basically hedge their bets, to some degree. And to another degree they leverage the hell out of everything that they’re doing, and when everything is completely leveraged there’s no room to move or to be able to respond to drastic changes in the industry such as costs (e.g., fuel).

DO YOU THINK IT’S FAIR TO SMALLER REGIONAL AIRLINES SUCH AS YOURS WHEN AIRPORTS OFFER SPECIAL SUBSIDIES AND CONCESSIONS TO BRING IN NATIONALBRAND LOW FARE AIRLINES IN PARTICULAR (FOR EXAMPLE, WESTJET INTO CHARLOTTETOWN AND GANDER)? AND DO YOU THINK GANDER’S EXPERIENCE WITH WESTJET IN PARTICULAR DEMONSTRATES JUST HOW WELL THIS WORKS?

I think Gander is still in denial about what happened … and you know it’s a typical scenario, it’s almost Canadian philosophy: “the Gods live somewhere else.” So we can’t possibly look to local carriers to answer our needs, we must bring them in from somewhere else. And that particular regional mentality that exists in Canadian markets is what has crushed a lot of regional carriers from British Columbia to Nunavut to Newfoundland and Labrador to Nova Scotia – all corners. It’s crushed a lot of carriers, and it’s not the inability of regional carriers to be flexible, or to respond to needs. It’s a question of this regional mentality.

We’re not really that interested in what WestJet does, to be honest. We’re not really that interested in what many of the discount airlines do. We’re interested in becoming the best regional airline in Eastern Canada – that’s our goal.

IS IT POSSIBLE TO BEAT THE NATIONAL CARRIERS? FOR EXAMPLE, ON THE ROUTE THAT BOTH AIR LABRADOR AND CANJET FLEW BETWEEN DEER LAKE AND ST. JOHN’S?
We’re not able to beat the big guys, the discount carriers, at their own game, and we don’t play that game at all. We do a different strategy altogether. If you want to look at Deer Lake-St. John’s as being an avenue where ourselves and CanJet both flew it and they decided to change their strategy, it would be because there is actually communication between us, and good common sense in the industry. And in a market as thin as Deer Lake-St. John’s, not able to sustain multiple 737 daily flights, where it can sustain multiple Dash 8 flights, they wisely chose to deploy their assets where they could actually sustain good load factors.

So they made the right decision for their own business, and we made the right decision for our business, and we’ll continue to make the right decisions for our business. You know there’s no fear of us flying nose-to-nose with WestJet or CanJet in virtually any market, and Moncton is an example of that. Yes, we fly between Moncton and Montreal, but we fly through Quebec City because Moncton-Quebec City is our target market.

HAVE THE DASH 8S BEEN A DECISIVE FACTOR IN UNLOCKING THIS AIRLINE’S POTENTIAL?
Definitely, but the Dash 8 is no mystery either. The Dash 8 was chosen by Air Nova, Air Alliance … . It’s a solid product that’s built on the most trustworthy airliner in the entire industry, the de Havilland Dash 6 Twin Otter. And those two particular aircraft are the best two regional aircraft in the entire world, and they happen to make up our fleet.

Here’s the most interesting thing about this: one of the things that we’ve learned from discount carriers is that fleet simplification leads to unknown cost savings. With fleet simplification into one or two types, even as a regional discount airline or a regional low-cost, we’re not really discount, we are low-cost, our costs are very, very much at a minimum. But even at the regional airline level, simplification of fleet types leads to unknown savings, leads to greater reliability, leads to interchangeability of equipment, interchangeability of crew members, and simplification of your procedures and your training programs. And it baffles me when I see other regional carriers in Canada and other places in North America diversifying into additional equipment types, realizing that they have to invest millions into each aircraft type. Despite the fact that on their own books or in their own business plans they may be able to justify such moves, it is going to come back to get them in the end.

I’ve also thought about the Jetsgo model a lot, I’ve thought about what went wrong with it, and people are quick to point the finger at their fare discounting, but it seems to me that the airline picked the wrong type of equipment first, and the second go-around tried to pick an equipment type that was better suited to their market needs. That was a very costly mistake, and with everything so leveraged … they weren’t able to absorb that costly change. If they’d let us run their business, they’d still be in business today!

DO YOU FORESEE THE EVENTUAL ADOPTION OF JET AIRCRAFT INTO YOUR FLEET AS WELL, SIMILAR TO WHAT HAPPENED AT AIR ATLANTIC SOME YEARS AGO WITH THE BAE 146? WHAT ABOUT REGIONAL JETS?
There’s other people flying them, and we’re not foolhardy enough to try and point ourselves in that direction right now. We’re operating a fuel-efficient, very reliable and flexible workhorse of the regional airline industry. Our model is built solidly on simplification of fleet type – if we did anything it would be a larger product from the Dash 8 family, such as the 300. That would be the only move that I could see us making in the foreseeable future.

OVER THE PAST FEW YEARS YOUR AIRLINE HAS SOMETIMES HAD TO MAKE THE TOUGH DECISION TO CUT SERVICES AS WELL, FOR EXAMPLE FROM ST. JOHN’S TO STEPHENVILLE AND ST. ANTHONY. WHAT DOES THIS SAY ABOUT THE FUTURE OF SOME SMALLER AIRPORTS IN CANADA AND THEIR LONG-TERM VIABILITY?
In Canada there is no regional airport policy to benefit smaller airports like there is in the US. The US does a much better job of taking care of smaller markets, regional airports, and supporting both the airport and the airline side of the industry where the consumer and ultimately the person in the rural centre benefits. Were Canada to actually be as socially conscious as it claims to be, and not as socially backward as it is in reality, something would be done about this, and services to smaller regional airports would not be threatened.

It caused me tremendous pain to have to pull service from Stephenville, and rest assured that although I grew up in the town, it was my decision to do so. And that might not give much pleasure to the people in Stephenville with whom I had worked hard to develop a market there for quite some time, but that’s the sad reality of it. Our airline changed direction towards a Dash 8 equipment type, and a 37-, 50-seat aircraft is really what’s needed in most regional centres, and we have to serve most regional centres. We cannot go to the lowest common denominator and say, well, the Beech 1900 or something similar in terms of 16-19 seats, is what’s needed to serve it, therefore that’s the only type of equipment we’re going to operate. That would just basically doom us to do nothing but small airports that are marginally viable at best, and in reality seriously threatened, again due to the lack of a regional airport policy in Canada.

St. Anthony is another example. Now we still serve St. Anthony with our coastal operations, the only connection that we changed was St. John’s, and the market was too thin to sustain the number of flights that were going in and out of there. And we may have a competitor in that marketplace that’s willing to lose money, but we don’t follow suit.

NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR HAS LED THE WAY IN CANADA IN CREATING REGIONAL AIRLINES RELATIVE TO ITS POPULATION SIZE AND RELATIVE LEVEL OF PROSPERITY. DO YOU THINK THIS IS WELL RECOGNIZED IN CANADA?
Sparsely populated areas tend to give flight to airline companies – Alberta and the Northwest Territories is another parallel example. And you can go right back and trace Canadian Pacific, Wardair and Pacific Western, starting from bush operations and working way up into solid, regional-base carriers that started flying jets in the day and age of heavy regulation. Newfoundland and Labrador is no different – Newfoundland and Labrador got its strong roots in aviation because of the fact that it was a country, and as a country it needed airmail, hence the lead to develop Newfoundland Airways. And then Newfoundland Airways branched out as Newfoundland and Labrador merged with Canada, and it branched out into being able to take its expertise and being able to fly very, very lean routes, control costs, and fly into other areas and be successful. Newfoundland Airways gave birth to Eastern Provincial Airways, which in turn swallowed up Maritime Central Air in the early 60s. Newfoundland Airways then changed to Labrador Airways Ltd. in ’68.

That in turn led to our family coming into this particular company, and enjoying taking over a business that had been run for so many years by so many other great people, which led to Air Nova. If you look at the connections throughout the industry you’ll see that there’s almost one route and one common thread, and that common thread is the Air Labrador family. And I use that terminology very deliberately, because our airline might change ownership three or four times over the next 30, 40 years, who knows. Will it always be me and my father, and then maybe my son someday, and maybe some other people? I don’t know. It’s hard to tell, but I’ll tell you one thing – this company is going to survive for a long, long time.

IS THIS SOMETHING WE INHERITED AS WELL FROM THE MASSIVE USAF/RCAF/RAF PRESENCE ALL ACROSS NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR FOR MANY YEARS DURING AND SINCE WORLD WAR II?
Certainly the American presence has had an incredible impact on aviation in Newfoundland and Labrador. I don’t think any other presence has had any impact whatsoever. The American presence was not just a question of their occupying airspace, or land use for military bases. They integrated into the economy, and were willing to lend a helping hand to those who were local residents of any particular community. Our family business exists today because the US Air Force saw value in doing business with Newfoundlanders, and saw value in giving local people some dignity. And were it not for the US Air Force in Goose Bay, we wouldn’t be talking now.

WHAT ABOUT THE FUTURE FOR AIR LABRADOR? DO YOU SEE YOUR AIRLINE EXPANDING INTO NEW MARKETS AND NEW OPPORTUNITIES, AND WHAT DO YOU THINK THE FUTURE HOLDS?
The thing about us is that we’re playing with openfaced cards – our cards are on the table. There are no secret clandestine meetings in backrooms or war rooms, and no incredible, heavy-duty planning on surprising the industry with brilliant moves. Our particular strategy is obvious, and our business is very, very much focused on our growth in Quebec and how that ties into Labrador, and that’s pure north-south trade. And in terms of what we’re doing now into the Maritimes through Moncton and the Magdalene Islands, that’s just an obvious extension of what needed to be done in the province of Quebec, and an ability to bring Moncton and New Brunswick into the picture.

We are going to do nothing more than strengthen our position in Quebec and Eastern Canada. There may be a couple of possibilities in Ontario, but they’re not on the immediate horizon, although they are things that we’re certainly talking about and looking at. Everything that we do will be well planned, it will be well researched, and it will be something that anyone else in the industry looking at us says, “well, of course.” There won’t be any “a-ha!!” or “eureka” or “look at that brilliant move they just made.” It’s going to be just, you know … we have an incredible knack for the obvious. How does that sound?