Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds Won't Help Air Canada Pick Up $100-Million Sky Marshal Security Tab

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Nov, 2015 01:31 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government has rebuffed Air Canada's plea to be compensated for a portion of the more than $100 million the airline says it has spent over the last five years to accommodate gun-toting sky marshals on its flights.
     
    Newly released documents show the government dismissed the airline's concerns about costs and other aspects of the program earlier this year on the grounds that changes would "compromise public safety." 
     
    Established after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, the Canadian Air Carrier Protective Program involves placement of covert sky marshals, known as in-flight security officers, on select commercial routes to prevent planes from being commandeered by terrorists.
     
    Details of the program — including information about its scope and which flights have officers — are a closely guarded secret.
     
    The Canadian Press used the Access to Information Act to obtain a censored version of a secret Public Safety Canada memo prepared earlier this year for Steven Blaney, minister at the time, and an accompanying letter from a senior departmental official to Derek Vanstone, an Air Canada vice-president.
     
    Air Canada had expressed concerns about the sky marshal program in 2013 and subsequently met representatives of the RCMP, Public Safety and Transport Canada, prompting the follow-up correspondence.
     
    Air Canada spokesman Peter Fitzpatrick declined to comment on the documents, saying that "disclosing information about security programs or procedures could compromise their effectiveness."
     
    However, the airline did say in a written submission to the government in February that carriers provide seats to in-flight security officers at no charge. If an officer requests a specific seat it must be provided even if it has been sold to a passenger, says the submission to a review of the Canada Transportation Act.
     
     
    In these cases carriers must remove the passenger and negotiate compensation for the seat, representing "a significant cost and lost opportunities to carriers."
     
    In the last five years the value of the seats Air Canada has provided to security officers "has reached over $100 million," the submission says. "In most jurisdictions, foreign governments provide compensation for similar programs to their carriers."
     
    Air Canada recommended the Canadian security program buy seats from airlines at market rates. Alternatively, airlines should be allowed to write off the value of seats against taxes and to charge officers for in-flight food and entertainment 
     
    In some cases, the airline says, security officers have requested seats on so-called positioning flights, which have no passengers on board, simply to travel to another airport. Carriers should not be responsible for helping officers get to work, Air Canada says.
     
    It recommended the RCMP share all data regarding risk assessments for individual flights with airlines, allowing carriers to make educated judgments about whether to cancel a flight, and to generally focus the program "only on flights that have a pre-agreed level of risk."
     
    Public Safety had no immediate response to questions.
     
    But in its letter to Vanstone, much of which remains secret, the department says the federal policy requiring airline expenditures on the sky marshal program — including in-flight meals and luggage handling — is "consistent with other countries" and the government is "not considering any amendments."
     
    In addition, there is no evidence security officers are taking advantage by filing expense claims for free meals, the letter says. "The RCMP conducted a review and has confirmed that appropriate oversight and controls are in place, and that officers are not reimbursed for a meal when one is provided on board."
     
    The air-carrier protective program contributes to the safety of Air Canada staff, passengers and equipment and, generally, all Canadians, the letter adds.
     
     
    "As such, the RCMP will continue to do what is necessary aboard your aircraft, and all other Canadian airlines, to preserve the security of Canadian air travellers."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liberal Backbencher Wants Words Mother, Father Eliminated From Government Forms

    Glenn Thibeault, a member of the provincial legislature for Sudbury, says 'gendered' terminology should be replaced with gender-neutral and inclusive language.

    Liberal Backbencher Wants Words Mother, Father Eliminated From Government Forms

    Professor In Hearing-impaired Uproar Says Student Has 'Selective Amnesia'

    Professor In Hearing-impaired Uproar Says Student Has 'Selective Amnesia'
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — The professor involved in a controversy at Memorial University of Newfoundland says a hearing-impaired student who claims she failed to accommodate him has "selective amnesia."

    Professor In Hearing-impaired Uproar Says Student Has 'Selective Amnesia'

    Trial Resumes For Dennis Oland, Charged With Murder Of His Businessman Father

    Trial Resumes For Dennis Oland, Charged With Murder Of His Businessman Father
    The trial for Dennis Oland in the death of his father, well-known businessman Richard Oland, has resumed with testimony from a police officer who was among the first on the scene.

    Trial Resumes For Dennis Oland, Charged With Murder Of His Businessman Father

    Dalhousie University Student Charged With Murder Back In Court Next Month

    Dalhousie University Student Charged With Murder Back In Court Next Month
    The case of a 22-year-old man charged in the death of a fellow student at Dalhousie University in Halifax will return to court next month.

    Dalhousie University Student Charged With Murder Back In Court Next Month

    Harper Enters French Debate With Political Allies But Bloc Backing On Niqab

    Harper Enters French Debate With Political Allies But Bloc Backing On Niqab
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper doesn't have a reputation as a gambler, but his 2015 federal election call is shaping up as an all-or-nothing bet on another Conservative majority.

    Harper Enters French Debate With Political Allies But Bloc Backing On Niqab

    Merritt, B.C., Demonstrators Fight Biosolids, Arguing Sewage Sludge Unsafe

    First Nations and members of the group Friends of the Nicola Valley are demonstrating outside the convention, hoping to convince delegates that dumping the biosolid material is unsafe.

    Merritt, B.C., Demonstrators Fight Biosolids, Arguing Sewage Sludge Unsafe