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Bearskin drops flights to Ottawa, K-W

A softening in the mining and southern Ontario high-tech industries can be attributed to Bearskin Airlines dropping service to Ottawa and Kitchener-Waterloo on April 1, and reducing flights to the major Northern Ontario cities.
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A softening in the mining and southern Ontario high-tech industries can be attributed to Bearskin Airlines dropping service to Ottawa and Kitchener-Waterloo on April 1, and reducing flights to the major Northern Ontario cities.

A softening in the mining and southern Ontario high-tech industries can be attributed to Bearskin Airlines dropping service to Ottawa and Kitchener-Waterloo on April 1, and reducing flights to the major Northern Ontario cities.

“Our cost to deliver service has been increasing over the last few years and our increase in revenue just hasn’t kept pace,” said Ron Hell, Bearskin’s director of marketing and sales, based in Thunder Bay.

“We made a decision to restructure and reduce the size of our company and refocus on our core market again.”

The company will reducing the number of flights between Thunder Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury, Timmins and North Bay. “It will be different in each market,” said Hell.

Staff layoffs are also coming in various departments throughout the company.

“We’re still working on that right now, “said Hell. “I can’t talk about numbers or positions.”

Hell said business remains “reasonably strong” but the drop in mineral exploration activity that started last summer, and continued with the slowdown in the Ring of Fire, has had an impact.

Bearskin launched service to Ottawa in the mid-1990s and extended that into the Kitchener-Waterloo area in 1997.

Hell said the Waterloo-Ottawa route was regarded as a free-standing service that was introduced to meet the needs of the high-tech sector and companies like Research in Motion, as well as government, student and other business travellers. “All of that (travelling market) has gone soft.”