Swoop returning more low-cost flights to Hamilton — pandemic permitting
Low-cost airline Swoop says it is bringing more flights back to Hamilton - pandemic permitting - just months after relocating dozens of weekly trips to operate out of Toronto.
The WestJet subsidiary started 2020 with hopes to expand ultralow-cost" service from John C. Munro Hamilton International Airport to more East Coast destinations. Instead, as air travel cratered during COVID, Swoop shrunk Hamilton-based service to three-times weekly flights to Edmonton and Abbotsford, B.C., and moved some service to Pearson airport in Toronto.
Pandemic restrictions dropped all passenger traffic to John C. Munro by 66 per cent last year to about 330,000 people, compared to nearly a million travellers in 2019.
Swoop continues to lose quite a bit of money," said president Charles Duncan in an update to the city airport committee Thursday - but plans nonetheless call for a steady diet of increases" to flights to and from Hamilton.
That assumes the pandemic eases through vaccination, rather than worsens. It's all going to depend on demand," he said in an interview.
Duncan said new flights to Winnipeg are set to start in late April and - depending on provincial COVID rules - new trips are planned this summer to Kelowna, B.C., and Halifax.
Airport committee chair and city councillor Lloyd Ferguson noted the city was deeply disappointed" by the decision last fall for Swoop to relocate many flights to Toronto. He asked if all those flights would return post-pandemic.
We really threw out welcome mat for you, and then last year you decided to pull out most of your flights," Ferguson said during the meeting.
Duncan replied the hard-hit airline had to shrink its flying footprint across Canada during the pandemic, from 25 cities to just four. We never left Hamilton and we never intended to," he said.
The Swoop president said he expects domestic demand for leisure travel and family visits" to rebound first this year. Right now, no international flights are even allowed to land in Hamilton due to COVID border restrictions. But if those pandemic rules ease, sun destination flights from John C. Munro will resume next winter.
Swoop has had an up-and-down ride since starting out in Hamilton in 2018. Low fares attracted many passengers in 2019, but the airline also faced criticism for flight cancellations that were investigated by the Canadian Transportation Agency and resulted in $19,250 fine.
A planned expansion to St. John's, N.L., Moncton, N.B., and Charlottetown was grounded last year by COVID.
Hamilton's airport has so far fared better than others during the pandemic, said president Cathie Puckering at Thursday's meeting, with revenues exceeding expenses by about $6 million despite COVID challenges.
The e-commerce boom associated with COVID lockdowns contributed to a 24 per cent spike in cargo by weight delivered through the airport. That includes unique pandemic deliveries like 100 flights from China to deliver COVID medical supplies and the first Pfizer shipment of vaccines into Canada.
Matthew Van Dongen is a Hamilton-based reporter covering transportation for The Spectator. Reach him via email: mvandongen@thespec.com
Hamilton's airport during COVID 2020: by the numbers
Passengers: 329,193 (955,373 in 2019)
Cargo: 658 million kilograms (532 million kilograms in 2019)
Infrastructure spending: $22.8 million ($11.6 million in 2019)
Payments to city (taxes and rent): $935,962 (996,879 in 2019)
The airport also saw a spike in helicopter traffic due a popular-but-controversial pandemic service for snowbirds paying to avoid car traffic border closures.
Noise complaints: 31 per 10,000 flight movements (18 in 2019)