No. A014/06
For release November 30, 2006
CANADA’S NEW GOVERNMENT OPENS THE
NEW HANGAR AT THE GREATER MONCTON
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
MONCTON, NB – The Transport Canada Hangar at the Greater Moncton
International Airport was officially opened today by the Honourable Lawrence
Cannon, Minister of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities.
"This new hangar will help the Government of Canada provide essential
operational and maintenance support for its fleet of aircraft, which delivers
vital safety oversight, policing and aerial surveillance programs", said Mr.
Cannon.
The new hangar houses Transport Canada and Royal Canadian Mounted Police
aircraft and serves as an operations and maintenance facility for these
aircraft. Transport Canada will continue to house its existing complement of
aircraft in the new hangar facility, including a Citation C550, a King Air Beech
C90A, a Bell 206B helicopter and a deHavilland DHC Dash 8. The hangar has also
been designed to accommodate a helicopter, a fixed wing aircraft, and nine staff
of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). It currently provides office and
working space for 17 Transport Canada employees.
Transport Canada aircraft are used by Civil Aviation Safety Inspectors as part
of their duties of conducting safety oversight activities for the civil aviation
system. The deHavilland DHC Dash 8 is used by Transport Canada to conduct marine
pollution aerial surveillance in Eastern Canada, including over the Great Lakes
and the St. Lawrence River.
"This new facility provides the Greater Moncton International Airport and the
surrounding community with additional infrastructure in support of the
development of an aerospace industry in this region," added Mr. Cannon. "It will
certainly serve to promote important business activity in southeastern New
Brunswick and help retain a highly skilled workforce."
After conducting an investment analysis, it was determined that building a new
hangar would be more cost-effective than renovating the old facility to meet the
most recent building code, introduced by the National Research Council in 1995.
The new hangar will provide a safer and more secure work environment. The total
cost of the project is about $8.5 million and includes all construction, design
and project management costs for the new hangar as well as the demolition of the
old hangar.
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Contacts:
Maurice Landry
Transport Canada Communications
Atlantic Region
(506) 851-7562 |
Natalie Sarafian
Press Secretary
Office of the Minister of Transport,
Infrastructure and Communities,
Ottawa
(613) 991-0700 |
Transport Canada is online at www.tc.gc.ca.
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