WestJet suspends Fort McMurray to Kelowna service amid oil slump
Latest blow to Fort McMurray airport, which has lost several key flights
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WestJet is suspending its service from Fort McMurray to Kelowna, as workers report "scary slow" times at the northern Alberta airport due to the economic downturn.
- Fort McMurray's workers desperate to find jobs
- Alberta forecast to lose 31,000 construction jobs amid oil slump
The Kelowna flight, which was scheduled five times a week, will end starting Feb. 15, Fort McMurray airport president Scott Clements told CBC News.
Service between Fort McMurray and Red Deer has already been cancelled, along with a daily flight to Denver, and the airport's flight to Mexico.
'Suspended,' not cancelled
We went from seeing 10 planes a day, down to one plane a day.- Dave Bellew, Airport worker
Oil workers would regularly fly in from Kelowna, but with so many jobs lost and oil below $30 US a barrel, there isn't enough demand, airport officials say.
"[WestJet is] not using the term 'cease,' they're just using 'suspended' because there's 35,000 trips a year of workers coming back and forth," Clements said.
"When the trigger happens and the economy turns around, that flight will be re-established, we're assured by WestJet," he added.
Fort McMurray's $250-million airport terminal opened in 2014.
While more than one million people passed through the terminal last year, passenger numbers are down 16 per cent.
'Scary slow'
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The biggest drop occurred with charter flights, where numbers were down 50 per cent.
"The amount of volume and traffic is just non-existent," said ground handler Dave Bellew, who works on the non-commercial side.
"We went from seeing 10 planes a day, down to one plane a day, if that. It's scary slow," he added.
Clements says, at the moment, it's a matter of weathering the downturn.
"We can pretty much survive at even another 10 per cent downturn without doing anything crazy, like raising our rates and charges," said Clements.