CBCnews

Air traffic controllers return to Fredericton

Last Updated: Wednesday, December 16, 2009 | 9:11 PM AT

Steve Hunt of Nav Canada says air traffic controllers are needed now in Fredericton because of the increase in traffic.Steve Hunt of Nav Canada says air traffic controllers are needed now in Fredericton because of the increase in traffic. (CBC)Air traffic controllers are returning to the Fredericton International Airport, starting Thursday.

There haven't been air traffic controllers in the tower since Nav Canada took over flight services from Transport Canada in 1996.

Nav Canada controllers in Moncton direct flights into Fredericton, said spokesman Steve Hunt.

But traffic in Fredericton is up 50 per cent this year, since the Moncton Flight College set up a campus at the airport.

About 12 full-time air traffic controllers are expected to be phased in.

"We had some temporary controllers come in and they're going to take over the control service for a period of time of up to around 14 months," Hunt said.

"And they have come in the middle of November and have got some training with respect to local awareness as well as they've been doing on-the-job familiarization in order to assume the role of air traffic control."

That will allow service specialists in Fredericton, who now control activity on the runways and advise pilots of aircraft movements and weather conditions, to retrain as air traffic controllers.

Fredericton airport president David Innes says having on-site air traffic controllers is the international standard.Fredericton airport president David Innes says having on-site air traffic controllers is the international standard. (CBC)Airport president David Innes expects having local air traffic controllers will be good for business.

"Air traffic control is well understood around the world as being kind of an international standard that everybody understands," he said. "So when we're selling our airport and our services to people in other countries, they'll certainly understand the traffic control system here better than perhaps they did in the past."

The local air traffic controllers will be able to avert any potential conflicts between aircraft by directing them in which order to land.

The Fredericton airport has been the busiest airport in Canada without a control tower. According to numbers compiled by the airport for May, planes travelled across its runways 10,000 times, landing and taking off. That's double the number at the next busiest airport without a tower, officials said.

  •  
 

New Brunswick Headlines

N.B. owes bank $50 million for Atcon
A lawyer for the New Brunswick government says the province will have to pay Scotiabank $50 million and then seek repayment as a creditor of the Atcon group of companies.
No pension review for N.B. MLAs
New Brunswick MLAs have decided not to strike a commission to review their pension plan, two years after quietly voting themselves a big boost in their benefits.
Graham's job prospects bright: N.B. Green leader
Premier Shawn Graham won't be out of work long if he loses September's provincial election campaign, New Brunswick Green Party Leader Jack MacDougall predicts.
Ex-CBC host mourned
Tributes were pouring in Monday for long-time CBC radio personality Gary Mittelholtz, who died of a heart attack Saturday while cross-country skiing near Sussex, N.B.
Woman to be in Saint John court for stabbing
A 27-year-old woman is scheduled to appear in Saint John provincial court Tuesday after a man was stabbed to death in the city early Monday morning.

Canada Headlines

Revelstoke avalanche investigation continues Video
Police and avalanche experts have returned to Boulder Mountain near Revelstoke, B.C., to wrap up their search and investigation into a weekend avalanche that killed two Alberta men.
Detainee review terms blasted by Liberals
Liberal MPs hammered the Tory government over the guidelines a former Supreme Court justice will follow in his review of documents related to the Afghan detainee affair.
Snowmobile events need tighter rules: widow
The wife of a man killed in a weekend avalanche near Revelstoke, B.C., wants to know why the extreme snowmobiling event her husband attended went ahead despite avalanche warnings.
Seal quota hike may be meaningless: sealer
Uncertainty about whether the seal hunt will go ahead, and questions about who will buy pelts if it does, may make the federal government's announcement that it has increased the quota for this year's East Coast seal hunt meaningless, sealers say.
Bar probed for serving murder suspect, 18
Ontario's Alcohol and Gaming Commission is investigating allegations that the 18-year-old charged with murdering two women on Friday was served alcohol in a Belleville bar the night before the shooting.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Detainee review terms blasted by Liberals
Liberal MPs hammered the Tory government over the guidelines a former Supreme Court justice will follow in his review of documents related to the Afghan detainee affair.
Revelstoke avalanche investigation continues Video
Police and avalanche experts have returned to Boulder Mountain near Revelstoke, B.C., to wrap up their search and investigation into a weekend avalanche that killed two Alberta men.
Canada's McKeever wins Paralympic gold
Visually impaired cross-country skier Brian McKeever won Canada's first gold medal of the Paralympics on Monday, taking the men's 20-kilometre event in Whistler, B.C.
National emergency plan adopted Video
Public Safety Minister Vic Toews says the federal government has formally adopted its emergency response plan, months after the auditor general accused Ottawa of being unprepared to co-ordinate emergency measures.
Toyota casts doubt on runaway Prius tale
Embattled automaker Toyota Motor Corp. is casting doubt on a California man's story that his Prius car sped out of control, saying the company's internal investigation is inconsistent with the story as described.