UNFLAIR

Flair Airlines Takes the Offensive: "Govt. NOT Seizing Our Planes"

Flair Airlines has gone on the offensive, telling the public that Ottawa is not seizing Flair airplanes or other property and that it’s business as usual.

“We want to address today's media coverage and be clear that the Government is NOT seizing Flair property & this situation does not impact our daily flight operations,” Flair said in a statement on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. “We will continue to fly and look forward to serving you now and in the future.”

Reports earlier in the week said Flair owes the Canadian government $67 million in back taxes. Canadian Press said the dispute prompted the Canada Revenue Agency “to obtain an order for the seizure and sale of the carrier's property."

But that doesn’t mean Ottawa is actually taking that step.

Flair Airlines CEO Stephen Jones told CP that the Edmonton-based airline has “a mutually agreed-upon payment plan with CRA to pay these importation duties, and we are current with that plan.”

It’s possible that the CRA could seize Flair property at some stage, presumably if the company fell behind on repayment or ceased paying its tax bill. But it appears that has not happened.

The CRA said it cannot comment on specific cases for confidentiality reasons, Canadian Press reports, but that it looks to make arrangements with a company “based on their ability to pay” before it garnishes revenues or goes even further.

“As a last resort, we may take additional legal collection actions such as seizing property or assets to protect the interests of the Crown,” spokeswoman Kim Thiffault said in an email.
Jones has said the $67 million in taxes owed relates to import duties on the 20 Boeing 737 Max jetliners that make up the airline’s fleet.

Flair says it has been forced to slow its expansion plans due to a shortage of Boeing planes and the ongoing debt issue.

“This will be a more muted year,” Jones said recently, “but we’ll look to get back into growth mode strongly in 2025.”

You may also like
New Airline Legislation Sparks War of Words in the U.S.
It’s a mess. U.S. airlines and travel advisors are angry about new refund and airline fee rules passed by Congress. A ...
Mastercard Report Says Japan is Red Hot; Cruising Even Hotter
A new Mastercard Economics Institute study says Canadians are heading to Japan in record numbers, and the world cruise industry is ...
Bahamas Tourism to Attend 42nd Caribbean Travel Marketplace in Jamaica
With tourism in The Bahamas looking up, representatives of the country's Ministry of Tourism, Investments & Aviation (BMOTIA) are set to ...
WestJet flight crew
WestJet Inaugurates Non-Stop Flights Between Calgary and Iceland
With the departure of the sold-out WestJet Flight 38, WestJet marks its seventh direct connection to Europe from its global hub ...
Savannah Buffett Named Godmother of Margaritaville at Sea Islander
Margaritaville at Sea has named Savannah Buffett, daughter of the late singer, songwriter, best-selling author, and sailor Jimmy Buffett, as Godmother of its newest ...

Talk Back! Post a comment: