Thank you very much.
As mentioned, I'm currently the president of the KF Aerospace Group of Companies, headquartered in Kelowna, British Columbia. Previously I was the president of Canadian North airlines, so I have seen this industry from various perspectives throughout my 35-year career. Thank you for the opportunity to provide you with our comments and observations related to the development and support of the Canadian aerospace industry.
KF is a privately owned company founded in 1970. We provide high-paying jobs and training to a current employee contingent of more than 900 women and men at bases in Kelowna, Hamilton, Vancouver and Portage la Prairie. Approximately 20% of our staff are women, of which half are technical employees, including aircraft maintenance engineers, aeronautical engineers and pilots.
We provide maintenance, repair, overhaul and aeronautical engineering services to a broad range of commercial aviation customers from Canada, the U.S. and elsewhere. Until COVID struck, over the past five years we have grown our MRO revenues by 10% per year and self-funded, with no subsidies, approximately $37 million in expansion of our MRO facilities in that time.
Our MRO services are provided at both Kelowna and Hamilton, where collectively we have over 750,000 square feet of hangar, shop support and administrative facilities, and can service up to 15 concurrent narrow-body aircraft in maintenance, modifications and cargo conversions at any given time.
We also self-funded $14 million to develop a purpose-built facility that just opened this year for Mohawk College's aviation program at Hamilton airport.
In addition to being the country's largest commercial aircraft maintenance, repair, overhaul and aeronautical engineering provider, we operate a cargo airline and an aircraft leasing company.
Since 2005, we have also had the contract to train Canada's military pilots in Portage la Prairie, continuing a tradition of Canadians training military pilots for the Commonwealth, dating back to 1940. In short, our company represents a broad spectrum of the aviation and aerospace industry.
This industry is an essential and powerful contributor to Canada's economy. Like roads, railways, ports and utilities, a solid aviation sector builds national strength and capacity. It's critical for our government to recognize this, but it's also critical to remember, when looking at development and support of the industry, that you don't lose sight of the fact that the industry is more than just the scheduled airlines and the cargo carriers.
For example, airlines must rely on maintenance providers such as KF to ensure the aircraft they fly are safe and meet the exacting standards required by our regulators. Unfortunately, Canadian carriers often look to maintenance providers outside Canada to provide their heavy maintenance services. This is troubling as it threatens to erode the capabilities of the Canadian industry. It's also troubling if those same carriers are looking for Canadian government-funded assistance. A criterion for eligibility should be to require the carriers to give first right of refusal to Canadian-owned and -operated MROs to provide their maintenance services.
Canada has Canadian-owned and -operated companies such as KF that are fully capable of providing high-quality, end-to-end services in support of the industry. We cannot lose this capability.
Canada is a large country. We will always be reliant on air transportation. It's an absolute necessity for our economy. Despite this, I submit that there has been a long-standing tendency for our governments to look upon aerospace and aviation only as a source of revenues for government coffers as opposed to viewing the industry as a partner in the country's economic foundation and future growth.
It is also important to recognize that support of the industry does not always have to include financial bailouts. Equally useful is the removal of impediments that prevent businesses from being able to prosper.
Make it easy for airlines and aerospace companies to do business.
Make it affordable for passengers to ride on Canadian carriers.
Do not impose charges on the industry that will have to be passed along to our customers. Airports rents come to mind here. Monopolies such as airports and NavCan simply pass along whatever their costs are to the carriers, who in turn, must pass them on to their customers.
Support and become a partner in the tourism industry. Look how successful that has been for the likes of Iceland, for example. This facilitation will have the effect of ensuring the carriers have a solid income stream. They will need aircraft, many of which will be leased. They will need servicing and maintenance.
Carriers, maintenance providers and lessors will need more employees, who will have decent-paying jobs and will pay taxes and stimulate their local economies. The technical schools and universities will need to train more skilled aerospace workers, who will pay tuition.
All the players in the supply chain will contribute directly and indirectly to the tax and economic base of Canada. This is a strong model for all parties.
As an example of an unnecessary impediment, due to COVID-related restrictions, we are currently having problems getting maintenance representatives into the country to be here during maintenance checks for their aircraft. Meanwhile, foreign commercial truckers are being allowed to bypass the hotel quarantine requirements. This is an unnecessary and unfair impediment to our business.
As we collectively climb out of the terrible repercussions of COVID-related restrictions, keep in mind that the industry was in no way responsible for this downturn, and the speed and means of recovery are not within the industry’s control. Without the right kind of support, we will lose our skilled labour and the high-paying jobs that contribute to the overall prosperity of the country.
The industry’s employment fell by 33% in 2020 compared with 5.2% in the broader economy. This was not the industry’s fault.