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April 19, 2002
Skyward flies to Coral
Harbours rescue
But Manitoba-based airline
doesnt solve many residents airline concerns
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
A campaign by Coral Harbour
residents to get larger aircraft service for their community partly succeeded
earlier this month, when Skyward Aviation Ltd. put the hamlet on its route three
days a week.
The Manitoba-based airline
serves several Nunavut communities, including Arviat, Whale Cove and Rankin
Inlet, where it has a regional office.
The company began looking
into serving Coral Harbour in August last year, when Calm Air discontinued its
service to the community. "We were just responding to the needs of the
people," said Mark Holm, manager of Arctic Operations for Skyward.
With two flights a day
on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays, Coral Harbour residents can connect with
First Air jets in Rankin Inlet. Holm said the schedule has been arranged to
make such connections convenient for passengers.
What may not be convenient
is the lack of washroom facilities on board, one of the main complaints residents
cited in their campaign. Coral Harbour relies entirely on charter flights and
regional airline Kivalliq Air, whose 12-seater planes are not designed for comfort.
Skyward uses a fleet of
four Bandit 110 twin-engine planes to cover its northern routes. The planes
are somewhat larger than Kivalliq Airs fleet of Pilatus PC-12 planes.
They seat between 12 and 18 passengers and are able to carry 1,000 pounds of
cargo with 12 passengers on board.
There is no washroom, Holm
said, "But we take along a porta-potty for long flights."
During a Nunavut Tunngavik
Inc. board meeting in Coral Harbour in early March, residents repeated their
plea for airline service, and presented a petition with 800 signatures.
"I am disabled and
I do travel," elder Margaret Nakolak told NTIs board members and
the assembled group. "Its very hard on the body there are
no washrooms and I have to continue getting up because of my disability. But
on the airline we have, I cant stand up."
Coral Harbour resident
Jimmy Ningeocheak echoed Nakolaks comments. "There are no toilets
in most of the planes. Most of their passengers are patients these people
are not well."
Former mayor Louie Bruce
made an emotional appeal. "If you could understand being forgotten... Coral
Harbour is a forgotten community. It feels like we are not part of Canada,"
he said. "We do get visitors from Italy, Germany and the Americas to do
some sports hunting," he said.
Coral Harbour has the demand
to sustain regular air service, he told the NTI board. "We do have money.
We can buy airline tickets. We are being bypassed," he said. "We can
see the planes flying from Rankin to Repulse overhead. We have a very good runway..."
Ningeocheak agreed: "As
you know, we are not declining in numbers. Our population is growing very fast.
Kivalliq Air does not have enough seats."
During the Arctic Winter
Games last month, Coral Harbours hockey team had to send its equipment
ahead of time because there wasnt room on the plane for both passengers
and luggage.
But Skywards service,
which began April 2, doesnt solve most of the problems Coral Harbour residents
complained of.
"Its a positive
step in the right direction," Ningeocheak said this week. But hes
still pursuing the communitys original goal of larger aircraft with washrooms
on board.
"They claim that they
will [use larger aircraft] down the road," he said. "Business is business.
Thats how things run up here, I guess."
The response from Coral
Harbour has been good, Holm said, but it hasnt been fantastic.
He added Skyward is planning
changes to its northern service in the next couple of months and that
those changes may affect Coral Harbour but he wouldnt specify what
they might be.
"This schedule was
just to get the service started," he said.
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