You’re not addressing the core issues and people’s questions. You’re making excuses and acting as a PR device.DHC-1 Jockey wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 5:15 amEven if that's what co-joe meant, having a "monopoly" is standard for every country worldwide. In the U.S., it's the FAA, with a smattering of contract towers operated by groups like Midwest ATC (where the pay and working conditions are abysmal even compared to the FAA - think working 8 hours in position with no breaks, all by yourself). The UK has NATS, Australia has Airservices Australia, France and Italy have has the DSNA and ENAV respectively who seem to go on strike every 6 months etc etc. At NavCanada we can't strike.goingnowherefast wrote: ↑Wed Jun 18, 2025 5:35 pmI understood co-joe's comment to mean the government handed NavCanada a monopoly. Meaning NavCanada has no incentive to provide a good service because the customers have no other choice.DHC-1 Jockey wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 4:57 pm
I'm not sure where you are getting the "government handout" idea from. Directly from the Transport Canada website: "NAV CANADA is a private, not-for-profit, non-share capital corporation, incorporated under the Canada Not-for-profit Corporations Act. The entity is self-financing, receives no support from government, and relies on fees charged to users of its services."
For those that keep beating the drum that NavCanada is a "monopoly" that should be abolished, I'd like to see some examples of other countries where that isn't the norm and there are multiple national-level service providers each with their own workforce, procedures and standards and see how well they function. Again, I'm not saying Nav doesn't have its own issues, but these are the same issues faced by many of the leading ANSP's worldwide.
What is NavCanada’s incentive to provide excellence in service and operations?
Unless you’re claiming excellence exists today?
Why is it , from my other post, Terminals like Vancouver, Ottawa and Winnipeg cannot handle accepting GA traffic — they claim they are too busy — while sectors like New York, Florida and Washington DC have no issue with it?