Porter Airlines soars onto Sudbury: Timmins, Sault Ste Marie also on airline's radar.

AuthorStewart, Nick
PositionNews

After veiled hints at spreading its wings through northeastern Ontario, Porter Airlines has officially announced its expansion into the Sudbury market.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

As of March 31, the company will begin with one daily non-stop round-trip flight between the Greater Sudbury Airport and the Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport, formerly known as the Toronto Island Airport, located minutes from the downtown business and entertainment districts.

Other carriers connecting the two cities instead travel to the Pearson International Airport.

Greater Sudbury Airport CEO Robert Johnston says he firmly believes the benefit to the Greater Sudbury community and the airport itself will be "enormous," as traffic between the two cities already makes up 40 per cent of the airport's business.

Available year-round, one-way fares from Sudbury will start at $99 plus taxes. Johnston says this may create lower pricing among carriers already connecting Sudbury and Toronto, such as Bearskin Airlines and Air Canada Jazz.

"The biggest impact it's going to have is to bring competition into our market, and that's going to result in more choice, more "frequency, and most importantly, lower fares on domestic, trans-border and international routes," says Johnston.

"Porter's a fairly new, upstart airline, and they've aggressively expanded into a number of markets like Boston, Chicago, Halifax, St. John's, Ottawa and Montreal. Their experience in all those cities is that they've brought competition into those areas, and fares have gone down as much as 50 per cent."

Sudbury is the second city in the North to host Porter.

The company moved into the Thunder Bay market in the summer of 2009, and is now up to three flights a day.

Should Porter similarly grow its Sudbury offerings beyond its initial single daily flight, something Porter officials say is likely to happen, Johnston predicts the airport may have to add more staff to accommodate demand for services.

Outfitted with a 70-seat configuration, Porter's Bombardier Q400 aircraft caters strongly to business travellers. Like other aircraft in its fleet, it will come complete with leather seats, extra leg room as well as complimentary snacks, small meals, beer and wine.

However, airport officials'" hope the low-cost alternative and its immediate connection to Toronto's downtown will appeal to a broad range of people, whether they're...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT