Mr. Chair, honourable members of the committee, thank you for the invitation to appear before you today. Since I only have 10 minutes at my disposal, I think it would be preferable for you and for everyone if I continued in English. It will be quicker.
I was born and raised in the small coastal town of Springdale, Newfoundland, which is basically a small service community for—believe it or not—the smaller communities outlying Springdale. Much like most of the youth of Newfoundland since Confederation, which is now part of our history, youth have left the town to find work elsewhere in Canada, when they can.
I'm not here to protect work for Newfoundlanders or suggest that it should be protected, but I wanted to give you that as part of the context of what is my moral and ethical character. Pilots are equally mobile; it is an essential and inherent part of our profession. Mobility is essential for us.
I'm no different from many Newfoundlanders. I left home when I was 18 years old. I joined the Royal Canadian Air Force. I graduated from the Royal Military College of Canada. I spent 20 years in the air force, met a nice young lady from Winnipeg, had some children, decided to leave the air force, and I've been with Air Canada as a professional airline pilot now for 15 years. Winnipeg is my home.
The Air Canada Pilots Association is the largest professional pilot group in this country. We represent more than 3,000 pilots who fly the mainline fleet for Air Canada, and I'm the elected president of the pilots association. For some time now we've been concerned about the way the temporary foreign worker program has been abused, as we see it, by certain airlines in the country.
I should point out right from the start that we have no financial stake or interest in this. We're not affected one way or the other, as Air Canada does not take advantage of the temporary foreign worker program whatsoever to recruit pilots. Therefore, we have nothing to gain or lose by what is decided among your committee. However, our association prides itself on championing and being leaders in our profession in Canada, and we feel obliged to speak out when we see foreign-licensed pilots being brought into our country when we know that there remains a pool of qualified Canadian pilots here.
While we understand that this program may be useful in other sectors, as I heard quite eloquently from Dan, we believe it has been abused in the aviation sector.
Aviation is a highly competitive global business which has been and will continue to be subject to dramatic economic swings and nearly constant restructuring. Canada has not been exempt from this volatility. As a result, many highly qualified Canadian pilots are being forced to leave this country to work elsewhere when these restructuring events occur.
One of the most recent examples was in 2010, with the receivership and subsequent demise of Skyservice airlines. About 200 Canadian pilots lost their jobs when that occurred. Yet at the same time as these licensed, qualified Canadian pilots were seeking work—many of them leaving the country to do so—other Canadian companies were using the temporary foreign worker program to bring in foreign-licensed pilots to operate their flights.
We've been drawing attention to this issue for some time, for several years now, yet we feel that very little has been done to address these issues. Prime Minister Harper's recent public statements that problems with the program have been identified and that they will be addressed have reassured us. We also believe that any government that is concerned about its fiscal situation should be concerned about providing such supports to business while simultaneously paying EI benefits to pilots who could be gainfully employed in this country.
Regardless, the abuse of the program resulted in the de-capitalization of Canadian aviation through the loss of this investment and of the many years of training and experience that these pilots are taking to their new employers in other jurisdictions. This results in a brain drain of experienced pilots and their skills which may not be recovered for many years, if at all. Canadian pilots are being forced to leave their country to find work. This is not the same as a Newfoundlander moving to Alberta.
It has also stalled the upward mobility and the careers of younger Canadian pilots. Junior pilots who enter the workforce will typically work for more than one employer over their careers, gaining skills and experience, then moving on to fly progressively larger and more complex aircraft. Airlines such as Air Canada and its competitors are at the apex of this progression. When airlines are allowed to bring in foreign-licensed pilots and pay them at a reduced rate of pay, it damages the career prospects of young Canadians and puts downward pressure on the overall market for their skills.
In short, it works against the economic interests of Canadians. Surely this can't be allowed to continue.
Many believe that a serious pilot shortage exists or is on the horizon. I don't see it that way. What I see is a shortage of pay and of employment opportunities in this country to entice young Canadians to enter the profession. Why would you consider a career with significant financial and training investment, when your mother, father, uncle, aunt—qualified pilots—are sitting at home without work?
One avenue to gain regulatory approval permitting the employment of foreign-licensed pilots is the use of the labour market opinion. The LMO rationalizes and proves that there are no Canadians suitably skilled to fill the available jobs. Under this scenario, I would not be a qualified or skilled pilot to fly with, say, Sunwing Airlines. They fly a 737 airplane. I have not converted or had a type rating on that airplane. I have thousands of hours: I'm a military-trained pilot; I have flown small, medium, and large airplanes all over the world; I've done air-to-air refuelling in NATO AWACS over Bosnia; for 15 years I've flown jet airliners as a first officer and captain at Air Canada, but under the LMO, I wouldn't be skilled or qualified to fly with Sunwing.
The temporary foreign worker program should not be used by airlines as an ongoing subsidy from government used to gain a commercial advantage over their competitors through the avoidance of these type-rating training costs, which are normally accepted in the business.
Air Canada constantly invests in the skills of its pilots as they advance through their careers and operate increasingly large and more complex aircraft. Air Canada's employment practice includes type-rating training as part of our professional development. This training investment not only creates a talented professional workforce able to meet the challenge of global competition, but also makes our airline one of the safest and most highly respected in the world.
There are mechanisms that work and which provide a net benefit to Canadian airlines helping to employ Canadian pilots, based on reciprocity. There are business models that take advantage of our peak winter season to import some foreign pilots to help with it and then use our Canadian pilots in, say, the U.K. in their peak season. There are models that work based on reciprocity.
Canadian companies should be encouraged to invest more in the skills and training of Canadian pilots before being permitted to bring in foreign-licensed pilots. We congratulate the government for the reforms to the temporary foreign worker program that have been announced, and to the extent that they address these issues, we would urge their passage into law.
I should acknowledge here that there are other actions under way within government to address different aspects of this issue. Our association is also taking part in Transport Canada's review of what is known as “wet leasing”. This has become the practice of certain companies, which lease both aircraft and pilots and operate them largely as charter flights to vacation destinations in the Caribbean and Europe.
As I've pointed out above, we're not opposed to labour mobility for professional airline pilots and to the negotiation of reciprocal arrangements between Canada and other jurisdictions. It would allow the movement back and forth of pilots to meet the seasonal demands in different countries and would be beneficial for pilots, operators, and the travelling public. The Air Canada Pilots Association has offered our advice and expertise to assist in such an effort, should the government choose to pursue such an initiative.
Finally, Canada is a country built on and connected by aviation. We have a long history of pilot-training excellence, exemplified by the creation of the Commonwealth air training plan. Our air force, in which I proudly served, exudes safety and professionalism and has throughout its history been the training ground of many pilots, both domestic and foreign.
Here in Canada we hold to a high standard of operations and maintenance, required by our very harsh and unpredictable operating conditions. Air Canada and its pilots are proof that such standards, when maintained, produce one of the safest and most highly respected airlines in the world.
Transport Canada has set, encouraged, and maintained this high level of safety and standards as the government's administrator. A Canadian air operator certificate or a Canadian pilot licence is meaningful and is a recognition that those standards are met.
While I readily admit that we do not have a monopoly on safety and professionalism, in neither of these cases—the leasing of pilots nor the leasing of aircraft—should our standards be lowered. The Canadian public have come to expect these as a given when they fly on a Canadian airline. Their confidence in the safety and reliability of Canadian air transportation must be maintained, and I respectfully encourage you to measure all of your decisions and recommendations with these ethics in mind.
Again, thank you very much for the opportunity. Merci beaucoup.