Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Virgin Atlantic Drops Vancouver

The Canadian Press , 03 Sep, 2014 02:33 PM
    VANCOUVER - Virgin Atlantic is dropping its only Canadian destination, Vancouver, when summer seasonal service ends Oct. 11. The service operated five flights per week.
     
    "Through our partnership with Delta Air Lines, we believe we can still serve the Canadian market using the wide range of connection opportunities that are available to our customers," Virgin Atlantic's Sarah Coggins said in an email.
     
    "As a result of this partnership, we will continue to offer a one-stop service to Vancouver on Delta Air Lines connecting through Seattle or Minneapolis."
     
    The U.K.-based airline says the change is part of a larger update of its route network, which will add or increase service between London Heathrow and several U.S. cities. Among other changes to its U.S. routes,, it's adding daily service to Detroit and increasing daily service to New York, Los Angeles and Atlanta.
     
    It's also ending service between London and Tokyo's Narita airport and between London and Mumbai, India, on Feb. 1 and winter seasonal service to Cape Town, South Africa, after April 2015.
     
    Virgin Atlantic is 51 per cent owned by Richard Branson, the flamboyant British businessman who founded the Virgin group of companies, and 49 per cent by Delta Air Lines, which acquired its stake in the British carrier last year.
     
    Delta and Virgin Atlantic have since formed a partnership on transatlantic services.
     
    Virgin Atlantic's summer seasonal route between Vancouver and Heathrow, which has been in place since it began with four flights per week in 2012, is all that remains of a much more ambitious plan outlined by Branson in 2000 and early 2001, before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks forced the U.K. airline to retrench and pull out of Canada.
     
    Before the 9-11 attacks put the global airline industry into a tailspin, Branson had seen Canada as a logical expansion for Virgin Atlantic and he spoke publicly of potentially starting a Virgin domestic carrier in Canada if federal rules changed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Chilliwack Double Homicide: B.C. Police Issue Canada-wide Arrest Warrant For Suspect

    Chilliwack Double Homicide: B.C. Police Issue Canada-wide Arrest Warrant For Suspect
    CHILLIWACK, B.C. - A Canada-wide arrest warrant has been issued for a suspect in the double homicide of two men and attempted killing of a female in Chilliwack, B.C.

    Chilliwack Double Homicide: B.C. Police Issue Canada-wide Arrest Warrant For Suspect

    Campers Evicted as Bears Treat Site Near Squamish Like 5-star Hotel

    Campers Evicted as Bears Treat Site Near Squamish Like 5-star Hotel
    SQUAMISH, B.C. - Camping has been banned along a stretch of the Squamish River in southern B.C. now that several bears are treating the area like a five-star hotel.

    Campers Evicted as Bears Treat Site Near Squamish Like 5-star Hotel

    B.C. Teachers, Employer Plan More Face Time After Renewed Negotiations

    B.C. Teachers, Employer Plan More Face Time After Renewed Negotiations
    VANCOUVER - B.C.'s unionized teachers and their employer will return to the bargaining table this week after restarting negotiations just weeks before the new school year.

    B.C. Teachers, Employer Plan More Face Time After Renewed Negotiations

    Health Canada OKs GSK's plan to fix Quebec flu vaccine plant problems

    Health Canada OKs GSK's plan to fix Quebec flu vaccine plant problems
    TORONTO - Health Canada says it has approved a plan by GlaxoSmithKline to fix contamination problems it has been experiencing at its Ste. Foy, Que., flu vaccine production plant.

    Health Canada OKs GSK's plan to fix Quebec flu vaccine plant problems

    Co-owner of Quebec Seniors' Residence where 32 Died Wants Inquiry into Fire

    Co-owner of Quebec Seniors' Residence where 32 Died Wants Inquiry into Fire
    QUEBEC - The owners of a seniors' home where 32 residents died in a tragic fire are calling for a public inquiry into the disaster.

    Co-owner of Quebec Seniors' Residence where 32 Died Wants Inquiry into Fire

    First Nations alliance launches court challenge of B.C. Treaty process

    First Nations alliance launches court challenge of B.C. Treaty process
    VANCOUVER - A seven-member Okanagan Nation Alliance has launched legal action against the provincial government over the First Nations treaty process in connection to overlapping claims by neighbouring aboriginal bands.

    First Nations alliance launches court challenge of B.C. Treaty process