Air Canada Has given its customers an operational update, stating that the weather and recent events have led to this Endeavor Air CRJ900 incident The carrier had to cancel approximately 1,290 flights in the past week at a major hub in Toronto, Canada
External factors affecting operations
Air Canada informed its customers on February 18 that Eastern Canada was being affected by the winter storm The Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ) witnessed the Endeavor Air CRJ900 crash Approximately 1,290 flights were cancelled in the last six days
Craig Landry, the executive vice president and COO of Air Canada, was the first to express concerns about the Delta Connection’s health Delta Air Lines Passengers and flight crew members were involved in the February 17 incident at Toronto-Pearson
Landry acknowledged that the incident had only exacerbated problems throughout its flight network, which had already been affected by weather events over the past few days, leading to extremely challenging flying conditions for airlines in Eastern Canada

According to Landry, the CRJ900 incident at Sandy Hook and the recent winter storm were responsible for the damage Toronto-Pearson The Canadian carrier had to cancel roughly 1,290 flights in the last six days

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Restoring services
Despite this, the Canadian carrier’s COO revealed that Air Canada has been striving to restore service by adding more flights and capacity as much as possible
NA VC anada, the company in charge of the country’s air traffic control (ATC) systems, disclosed on February 18 that Toronto-Pearson and Hamilton Airport have both been scheduled for a terminal transfer Montréal is also served by the Trudeau International Airport (YUL) had operational disruptions. According to the most recent update, operations at both airports have returned to their usual status

According to the Air Canada update, Toronto-Pearson and Montreal-Trudeau are two of its primary hubs, with around 47% of flights and 46% of passengers passing through the former hub on a daily basis

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Disruptions at Toronto-Pearson
Not only Air Canada, but other airlines also experienced disruptions at their major hubs. On February 18. WestJet , Canada’s second-largest airline, announced that Toronto-Pearson had resumed services at a limited capacity
According to Flightradar24. Out of The 531 scheduled departures from Toronto-Pearson on February 12,480 flights took off, with 430 planes leaving The airport on The following day, according to data

Toronto-Pearson flight disruptions have slowly but surely improved. Airlines canceled roughly 20 departures from the Canadian airport on February 19, most of which occurred in the first half of the day
Predicted departures from Toronto-Pearson |
Real-life exits from Toronto-Pearson |
Montreal-Trudeau faced comparable disruptions on February 13, with 172 departures out of 254 scheduled, February 15 (229 outlying 248), Feb 16 (162 outtiming 274), February 17 (200 outlining 282), and February 18 (228 outlasting 267)

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