Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau sent out a conciliatory note to all Aeroplan members, apologizing for the rough summer of travel but insisting that the situation is improving. But his “pandemic” defense is getting stale.
“Pandemic” Defense From Air Canada CEO Is Not Convincing
This summer has been particularly rough for Air Canada, with its direct and third party labor force unable to match the surge in demand for travel. The result has been an alarming rate of delayed and cancelled flights as well as mishandled checked baggage.
Rousseau still blames COVID-19, explaining, “The summer increase in traffic has also prolonged the pandemic’s disruption of our entire industry.” He adds:
I would also like to take this opportunity to say that if you travelled recently, yet still encountered a disruption, we at Air Canada apologize for this. With an industry as complex as ours, and dependent as it is on the coordinated performance of so many entities, recovering from an event without precedent like a global pandemic presents many challenges. For this reason, we appreciate your continued patience and understanding.
But Rousseau says the situation is under control and steadily improving, noting that compared to late June, the number of flight cancellations and mishandled bags is way down.
While it is not unreasonable to argue that the pandemic severely disrupted the industry (we’ve all seen that), it strikes me as disingenuous to put such a high blame on the pandemic in the summer of 2022 when Air Canada saw the recovery coming and could have been much more aggressive in proactively hiring staff. You know, like most other airlines did…
And if Air Canada is apologizing, Rousseau would be better served apologizing for trying to deny delay compensation to passengers by arguing that staff shortages constitute a “safety” issue (which exempts Air Canada from having to pay compensation). No sir, your inability to hire is not a safety issue, it is a cost issue.
Here is his full letter:
Dear Matthew,
Earlier this summer, I wrote to you about how conditions in the global airline industry were impacting you as a valued Air Canada customer and to recognize any inconvenience you may have experienced. In my letter, I also outlined the many initiatives we had undertaken to address these issues. Today, I am writing to update you on the progress we have made to date to return our airline to its pre‑pandemic standards of customer service.
First, however, thank you for your continued loyalty to our company. Virtually every week this summer, our traffic volumes have increased and are now nearing 80% of the number of customers we carried in 2019, our last summer before the pandemic. It is evident people are keen to travel and all of us at Air Canada are proud that you are entrusting to us your very important travel arrangements. Let me assure you we understand our responsibility to meet your expectations.
However, welcome as the recovery is, the summer increase in traffic has also prolonged the pandemic’s disruption of our entire industry. Airlines, airports, governments, and the other third‑party suppliers are labouring like everyone else to return to normal. We have been working closely with our industry partners to remedy the situation and, while we still have much work to do, the results are trending positively, and customers are already experiencing the benefits directly when they travel.
As an intensely data driven organization, we can clearly see those areas that require more operational focus, as well as those that are showing improvement. In the spirit of transparency, I would like to share some metrics related to the areas that most immediately affect our customers. For the period June 27 to August 14, during which we carried approximately 6.4 million customers, the Air Canada family (including Air Canada, Air Canada Rouge and Air Canada Express), recorded the following operational improvements:
- Flight Delays – Comparing the week of June 27 to the week of August 8, there was a 48% reduction or 1,160 fewer flights that took a delay longer than one hour. In addition, flight delays overall are getting shorter. For flights that experienced any delay, the average arrival delay during the week of June 27 was 28 minutes longer than the same week in 2019. As of the week of August 8, this had improved to 12 minutes.
- Flight Cancellations – There has been a substantial reduction in the volume of flight cancellations. During the week of August 8, there was a 77% reduction in the number of cancelled flights as compared to the week of June 27. This translates into 960 fewer flights cancelled. Furthermore, flight completion, which is the percentage of all scheduled flights that are not cancelled, reached 96.7% during the week of August 8, which was less than one percentage point lower than the same week in 2019. The vast majority of customers experiencing cancellations, often due to weather or other unexpected factors, were able to travel within 24 hours.
- Baggage Handling – The strongest area of improvement over this period can be seen in baggage handling, where the airline handles over 650,000 bags per week. During the week of June 27, mishandling rates per 1,000 customers were approximately 2.5 times the same number in 2019. As of the week of August 8, this rate fully recovered to 2019 levels with a baggage handling success rate of 98%.
While these numbers are encouraging, our recovery remains very much a work in progress with a significant distance yet to be covered. Even with our success to date, we are committed to further improvement in those areas that we directly control and also by supporting our third‑party partners, upon which we rely, as they too strive to return to pre-pandemic normalcy.
Finally, I would also like to take this opportunity to say that if you travelled recently, yet still encountered a disruption, we at Air Canada apologize for this. With an industry as complex as ours, and dependent as it is on the coordinated performance of so many entities, recovering from an event without precedent like a global pandemic presents many challenges. For this reason, we appreciate your continued patience and understanding.
Thank you again for your loyalty to our company. Please be assured that all of us at Air Canada are preparing and eager to welcome you aboard and to transport you safely in the very near future.
Sincerely,
Michael Rousseau
President and Chief Executive Officer
Air Canada
It’s a nice letter, but it really misses the point. It’s time to stop blaming the pandemic for Air Canada’s woes.
CONCLUSION
Air Canada is apologetic for the rough summer of travel, but its choice to link everything back to the pandemic at this point is not convincing when other airlines around the world have been able to ramp up services without nearly the level of disruption experienced with Air Canada. It’s time to keep hiring, keep building, and stop making pandemic excuses.
image: Air Canada
Most TATL airlines (and lots of airports) Amber Hearded the bed this summer, not gonna give Air Canada the pass but everyone else would have probably made the same excuse (IIRC Delta CEO did the same a while back?)
How long will we blame the pandemic for all our failings? It’s like blaming Jimmy Carter for inflation today. Less hyperbolic, it’s like saying the pandemic made me get a speeding ticket or not pay my taxes.
I think that’s a stretch, Matthew. Covid is still very much affecting operations in those calling in sick. Not to mention the issue with hiring as, really, who wants to work at an airport these days for what they pay? I would give this a hard pass as to saying it was wrong to cite Covid. Everything these days is an extension of the trauma on society and the ongoing battle to get this out of every day life for many.
Oh, and Jimmy Carter was in the 1970’s. We are still home testing, getting sick, and dealing with Covid only two years later. Poor Jimmy Carter, a nice man who deserves better.
Matthew, I don’t disagree with you, everyone needs to stop blaming covid for everything. But at the same time I wouldn’t single out Air Canada either, is all I’m saying. Everyone’s screwing up.
Experts in the industry warned the airline industry and airports that with the vaccines being widely available, countries were going to open up and this summer was going to be hectic since last December. But, the airlines and the airports didn’t listen and the passengers are the ones who end up facing the consequences.
If something like this happened to me or my colleagues where if we ignored the predictions and didn’t take the means to even have a plan to mitigate risks, then we would’ve been fired immediately. Makes me wonder if folks up top at airlines even listened to their risk analysts…
Exactly this. Yes, the pandemic had (past tense) a role at one point that brought the industry to its knees, but it’s the airlines’ fault that they laid off as many people as they did then failed to heed the advice of experts who predicted the rebound. Ed Shitface Bastion is the champion of continuing to blame Covid for his and his shitty C-suite’s repeated failures to respond/react accordingly to the uptick in travel. They all circle back to the tired refrain of “But…but…Covid made us do it. It’s all Covid’s fault.” Man, I wish we had a government with some actual teeth that would pummel airlines. Both parties have been utterly pathetic at holding airline accountable for anything. But lobbyists gonna lobby, I guess. But, really, heads should be rolling.
Don’t worry, Buttigieg is off paternity leave and is ready to levy fines and fees to anyone in the airline industry. We’ll finally be saved.
Thank you for adding your brilliant insight to the conversation.
Yup! No problem @DC
Maybe if the Canadian Commie leader Trudeau hadn’t mandated the vaccines everything would have been ok.
And also thank you for adding your brilliant insight to the conversation. Please expand further on your genius
in Air Canada’s defense, we are having a serious problem with recovery in Canada, especially when it comes to labor markets. The Canadian government, in their attempt to help, gave my fellow Canadians a rather large monthly payment to help get through the pandemic, and very generous unemployment benefits, and as a result, a large portion of my fellow countrypeople decided they don’t really want to go back to work. The climate up here with regards to COVID/jobs/money/moving parts is quite a bit different than down in the US (I can say this rather confidently having spent more than a month in various parts of the US in the last couple months), and we are also quite a bit more regulated here than the US, so I would actually not jump down AC’s throat on this one. Having flown exclusively with Air Canada, almost always in J, in October, March, March, May, July and August, I can attest to the improvements and acknowledge that clearly they are trying VERY hard to restore pre-pandemic levels of service. The communication was appreciate as an Aeroplan Elite member, and the gains in service levels have been noticed.
I’d blame Air Canada for the mess if this wasn’t happening ALL OVER THE WORLD. NO STORY HERE MR. CLINT.
Oh, but it’s not happening all over the world to the same degree or level as Air Canada…just look to their neighbors in the south.
you dont seem to acknowledge the input from somebody from Canada who actually has an intimate knowledge of why things are happening.
The same things are happening down here in the States as well, just not to the same degree. Staffing shortages in the airline industry, hospitality, everything are causing services to be reduced. Are you blind?
And it’s happening all over Europe too.
I’m not surprised that they’re still attributing this to Covid. Even though there are vaccines and many people are resuming their lives, the employment situation, especially for these jobs, lags quite a bit, and every type of customer facing job in every industry in every country still is facing troubles in staffing up. It’s frustrating yes and I hate it and I had a horrible time on Air Canada this summer too. But despite our most fervent wishes, things just dont snap back as quickly as we would hope.