Airport on Montreal's South Shore to offer flights to Canadian cities as part of major expansion - Action News
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Montreal

Airport on Montreal's South Shore to offer flights to Canadian cities as part of major expansion

The Saint-Hubert Aiport in Longueuil, Que., wants to build a new 40,000-square-metre terminal for flights to Canadian cities such as Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary and Halifax.

Flights from Longueuil, Que., to Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary and Halifax as of 2024

People and cars are in front of a building.
Saint-Hubert Airport says the new terminal will help turn the area into 'a true aeronautical hub.' (Submitted by Saint-Hubert Airport)

A terminal for commercialflights from Montreal's South Shore to cities like Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary and Halifaxis at the heart of Saint-Hubert Airport's expansion plans,whichare expected to cost at least $200 million.

The terminalwill cover 40,000 square metres east of the airport and host up to four million passengers a year. Toronto-based Porter Airlines will operate out of the airport located in Longueuil, Que., though the airport says it is inviting more airlines to do so as well.

There are also plans tobuild a 130-room Holiday Inn Express Hotel next to the airport that would openat the same time as the terminal.

The project was unveiled on Monday during a news conference with Quebec Transport Minister Genevive Guilbault and Longueuil Mayor Catherine Fournier.

Flights to Toronto would land either at Pearson International orBilly Bishop Toronto City Airport. Pascan, an airline based in Longueuil, also plans to increase the number of regional flights it offers.

Airplanes are flying over a building.
The airport says the expansion project will be jumpstarted by a $200-million investment from the private sector. (Submitted by Saint-Hubert Airport)

"Our terminal meets a growingneed to ensure a service of quality for travellers in Quebec. We also intend to contribute to thedevelopment of new technologies in the field of aviation," Saint-Hubert Aiport CEO Yanic Roy said in a statement.

In 2018, the airport inaugurated a new runway capable of handling larger aircraft, such as the Boeing 737-200.

While trying to position itself as a major player in the aviation sector, the airport has dealt with noise complaints from nearby residents. Earlier this month, the city and the airportreached anagreement to ban commercial flights from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m., starting next year.

Group protests expansion

Regardless, agroup of protesters showed up at the news conference Monday, holding signs in ashow of opposition to the expansion.

Among them was Marie-Pierre Brunelle. She speaks for a Longueuil citizens' committee, Coalition halte-air Saint-Hubert, that is calling for a moratorium on airport developmentuntil the potential impact on health, climate,economy and noise has been fully analyzed and discussed.

"There areno impact studies of any kind that havebeen presented," she said. "So, until then, how can you really choose a development that's good for everyone?"

Two people are standing in front of an aircraft.
Yanic Roy, left, the CEO of Saint-Hubert Airport and Catherine Fournier, right, the mayor of Longueuil, were present during Monday's news conference. Fournier says the airport's expansion will provide a boost to the province's economy. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

She said only partial information has been provided to citizens about the number of flights and potential noise that it may create in the area, raising significant concerns among those who live nearby.There are people not just in Longueuil, but also in the nearby Saint-Bruno-de-Montarvillebothered by the noise, she said.

"Some of these politicians, there's no communication," she said.

While officials are promising quieter planes, she said, there are always exceptions that may come up and that's why her group is calling for impact studies as well as a clear plan to enforce restrictions on noise during the day and at night.

Quiet planes promised

Longueuil's mayor said additional air traffic at the airport will not affect that commitment.

"We wanted to make sure the development project didn't accentuate problems related to noise," Fournier said.

Michael Deluce, the president and CEO of Porter Airlines, said the planes that will be used for the flights theDe Havilland Dash 8-400 and theEmbraer E195-E2 are the "quietest aircrafts in their class."

The airport, which opened in 1927,was once a military base and now is home to private flight school and several regional airlines.

Currently, about 200 airplanes fly out of Saint-Hubert Airport daily.

Work on the new terminal will begin in the spring and is expected to be completed by fall2024.

With files from Radio-Canada and Matt D'Amours