Thank you to the committee for this opportunity to appear.
We recognize that this very special holiday season was a difficult one for travellers. As airports, we are squarely focused on improving the traveller experience. This is what Canadians expect from us and as airports and across the industry we must deliver.
To put the magnitude of the operations at Pearson in perspective, on any given day during the holiday season from December 23 through to December 31, Pearson processed over 108,000 passengers per day. This took place during one of the most extreme weather events of the year.
We know that this summer was also very challenging, but very different than the circumstances over the holiday. With the summer restart, Pearson went from being one of the world's most shut down major hubs for the longest duration, to one of the busiest in the shortest amount of time.
For point of reference, back in December 2021, LAX was back to 55% of its prepandemic multi-tens of million passenger numbers, whereas Pearson was merely at 25%. Again our ramp-up was much steeper and much faster than many other complex, large-hub global airports.
Restarting and accelerating an air travel system has many moving parts, including airport facilities of billions of dollars of assets. Again, the summer restart challenges were very different than what was experienced during this Christmas. The airports and the system had modernized in a significant way and accelerated readiness in a significant way to move passengers more efficiently. Examples include technology tools that allow passengers to pre-book, and understand the airport environment and operating environment before they arrive at the airport.
Recognizing that this recovery period still had many vulnerabilities and anticipating that there would be weather challenges that typically come with winter, back in the spring and summer we elected to decrease the winter and holiday capacity of the airport by 17%. Reducing the number of aircraft that could take off and land from 90 to 75 movements per hour in the slot process was intended to reduce the risk of lineups and add resiliency to the airport operation.
We know that's not an easy decision. There are costs in terms of the economy, choice for Canadian travellers and business for the airlines, but we felt that was important.
This holiday, what happened? It was really a perfect storm of significant epic bad weather and an industry that was healing from the COVID extended shutdown. Labour is still very weak across the board of our partners. Cancellations due to weather have a compounding effect, leading to delays, backlogs and challenges with baggage. We know that airlines are in charge of taking bags on and off planes, and airports are in charge of the infrastructure.
At GTAA, we are transparent and recognize our part in providing the airport facilities, and when those facilities and issues with them do contribute to incidents. On December 24 and 25 specifically, the terminal 3 baggage-handling system was impacted by severe cold weather and an atypical wind direction, which resulted in an unusual freezing of sprinkler lines and conveyor belts. That glitch, as unfortunate as it was, impacted less than 10% of the overall bags that were in the system those two days, according to the preliminary reviews that we have conducted.
During those two days 28,000 inbound bags and 26,000 outbound bags went through terminal 3, which is where we had the mechanical issues. This is the equivalent of one bag per passenger who travelled during that period on a quantitative basis.
That said, we are absolutely committed to modernization, increasing the resiliency of our system for current conditions and current risks. We are well on our way to doing that from an operating perspective, and we are going to do that from an infrastructure and investment perspective as well.
That said, I will touch on a few things that we need and that we believe this hearing allows us to share. These will improve the travel experience for Canadians on a forward basis.
We must make more investments, not just at YYZ but across the airport infrastructure and airports in Canada. We ask the government to allow us to reinvest rent that we paid to them during 2020 and 2021, years where we took financial losses and we had very low levels of business. Airports across Canada took on $3.2 billion in debt to get through the pandemic and operate the essential infrastructure that we needed for health and for Canadians.
The second of three is that we need better information and real-time data from our partners, especially during our regular operations. We need to get more information in real time to help communicate to passengers and run a more stable, situationally aware airport operation.
We also need to recognize thoroughly that labour today is not what it was. This is outside of the airport industry but absolutely in the aviation industry as well. An equivalent level of staffing to 2019 does not reflect the high attrition rate that we see in our partners, or the training and learning curve that new employees have in a complicated—