KINGBOBOFTHENORTH
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- Aug 12, 2006
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Article in today's USA Today quoting the Business First of Buffalo publication:
Nearly a third of the customers using Buffalo Niagara International Airport are Canadians seeking lower fares on the U.S. side of the border, according to Business First of Buffalo (free registration). Buffalo's airport sits less than 20 miles from the U.S.-Canadian border. The publication writes that Canadians are being lured to the airport "because of low-cost air carriers such as Southwest, JetBlue and AirTran" and the lower fares that competition from those airlines has helped bring to Buffalo.
Due largely to high trans-border taxes and Canadian aviation fees, flights to Florida, New York and other popular U.S. destinations often cost dramatically less from Buffalo than from nearby Canadian airports such as Toronto and Hamilton. Business First also notes that Southwest - which began flying to Buffalo in 2000 - has overtaken US Airways as the city's busiest commercial airline. With overall passenger numbers surging past expectations, the airport is now planning to add additional security lanes and retail options. Passenger traffic at the airport has nearly doubled at the current facility since it opened in 1997, Business First reports.
Nearly a third of the customers using Buffalo Niagara International Airport are Canadians seeking lower fares on the U.S. side of the border, according to Business First of Buffalo (free registration). Buffalo's airport sits less than 20 miles from the U.S.-Canadian border. The publication writes that Canadians are being lured to the airport "because of low-cost air carriers such as Southwest, JetBlue and AirTran" and the lower fares that competition from those airlines has helped bring to Buffalo.
Due largely to high trans-border taxes and Canadian aviation fees, flights to Florida, New York and other popular U.S. destinations often cost dramatically less from Buffalo than from nearby Canadian airports such as Toronto and Hamilton. Business First also notes that Southwest - which began flying to Buffalo in 2000 - has overtaken US Airways as the city's busiest commercial airline. With overall passenger numbers surging past expectations, the airport is now planning to add additional security lanes and retail options. Passenger traffic at the airport has nearly doubled at the current facility since it opened in 1997, Business First reports.