August 8, 2003
Friends in high places
Manager of Nunavut's
busiest airport takes his job and loves it
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
John
Graham, Iqaluit airport manager, drives down the airport's 9,000-foot runway.
(PHOTOS BY KIRSTEN MURPHY
|
John Graham slides behind
the steering wheel of a white truck. A voice at the end of a two-way radio approves
his request to drive down the runway. Graham, Iqaluit airport's manger, wastes
no time finding the gas pedal.
Speeding along the 9,000-foot
strip of open road, the jovial Scotsman marvels at the acres of purple saxifrage
lining the runway. Indeed, the flora is the reason for the drive.
"Have you ever seen
anything like it?" he asks, not waiting for a reply "It's bloody beautiful."
Graham's enthusiasm for
Nunavut's official flower pales only in comparison to his love for his family
and anything aviation-related.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Maintenance
men Dion Fitzpatrick and Marshall Morgan spend summers fixing fences and re-tarring
the runway. Winters are dedicated to snow removal.
|
His office is on the second
floor of the airport's yellow tower. The walls are a mixture of aerial photos,
children's artwork and space memorabilia. Unbeknownst to the thousands of people
passing beneath him in the lobby each year, Graham's office houses Iqaluit's
most extensive aviation and space collection.
Graham's latest acquisition
is an autographed model Bell-X1 - a replica of the plane Chuck Yeager flew in
1947 when he broke the sound barrier.
"Not even my family
knows I have this one," says the 46-year-old with childlike charm.
There are also hidden treasures,
like a spongy tile from a shuttle and a commemorative coin made from scrap shuttle
metal. Graham even has a letter from John W. Young, whom the movie Apollo
16 is based on. The letter, circa 1971, precedes the historic mission. "Many
thanks for your kind letter of congratulations. Of course Ken [Mattingly], Charlie
[Duke] and I are highly pleased with our assignment to crew the Apollo 16
mission and are most grateful for your thoughtfulness in writing."
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Levi Nowdluk of Uqsuq
Corp. is one of several hundred Igalugmiut employed through spin-off jobs at
the airport.
|
Graham and his family have
made several trips to Cape Canaveral, Texas, home of the NASA launch site. In
1985, the year astronaut Marc Garneau became the first Canadian on a NASA mission,
Graham provided lively, on-site commentary for CBC listeners in Iqaluit. His
broadcasting debut was a hit.
"We heard about this
space buff who gave a play-by-play of the launch," says astronaut Robert
Thrisk, in an interview from Houston, Texas. Thrisk was the stand-by astronaut
had Garneau withdrew from the mission.
The two men were so impressed
with Graham that a team of NASA astronauts have since visited Iqaluit three
times, Thrisk says.
"He overwhelmed us
with his hospitality and breadth of knowledge. He's more nuts about space than
Marc and I if you base it on enthusiasm," says Thrisk, who is training
for his next NASA mission.
During one of three visits
to Iqaluit, the trio flew to Pangnirtung. Graham keeps a colour photo of the
trip in his office. Thrisk, who took the photo, chuckles when reminded of the
picture.
"We ran out of film
after that one shot and so there's no proof I was there. When you see John,
tell him I need another Arctic Circle hike," he says.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Johnny
Munich is one of three Iqaluit Airport Emergency firefighters on call 24 hours
a day.
|
Graham arrived in Iqaluit
1976 at the age of 19 to work for the Hudsons Bay Company. Fellow Scotsman Euan
Mackay arrived at the same time. To this day, the two are good friends who sit
down to a Robbie Burns dinner once a year.
Mackay, now a lawyer in
Iqaluit, says Graham hasn't changed in 17 years.
"What you see is what
you get with John. He juggles the fantastically demanding job of running the
airport and has time for his family, the cadets and volunteer work. His days
must have 48 hours," Mackay says.
Graham is the past president
of the Royal Canadian Legion branch No. 4. He is also an active cadet leader.
The Iqaluit airport was
built as part of a military base in 1943. Today, the standout yellow terminal
is the busiest airport in Nunavut. About 90,000 people, some celebrities and
royalty, travel on board the 19,000 flights passing through Iqaluit each year.
As much as Graham loves
his job and the opportunity to meet astronauts, pilots and the occasional celebrity,
he's particularly proud that the airport is a major employer of local labour.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Hugues
Lessard, flight service specialist for Nav Canada, oversees the arrival and
departure of 19,000 flights each year.
|
"It's like a small
city within a city and a real team effort. There's no one person who does it
all," says Graham who took over the top job in 1996.
The Government of Nunavut's
department of community government and transportation (CGT) owns the airport.
About 20 people are employed by CGT at the airport, including the three members
of the airport emergency and firefighting team.
Nav Canada, the federal
agency responsible for air safety, employs another eight to 10 people who monitor
the incoming and outgoing planes. The remaining 300 jobs are subcontracted to
local business, like Narwhal Arctic Services, which provides snow removal in
the winter and fence and runway repairs in the summer. Other area of employment
are ground crews, caterers for in-flight meals, customs and cargo handlers.
After seven years running
Nunavut's biggest and busiest airport, Graham is still scouring the Internet
looking for new acquisitions.
"It's an all-consuming
passion," says fellow aviation enthusiast John Henderson, RCMP V Division
commanding officer.
"He's more into space
and I'm more into aviation history but it feels very comfortable sitting with
a kindred spirit. If I had more time, I'd spend it in his office."
|