Based on the number of messages left on the airport management answering system on holidays, weekends and after-hours, I think it might be beneficial to revisit how to get the big question answered. This is an updated version of the “In the City Article” that first appeared in the Star Herald on November of 2007.
The dispatching of aircraft is very complex and changes on a moment by moment basis. It involves many different disciplines including aircraft flight crews, FAA air traffic control, weather personnel, airline dispatchers and airport operations personnel. Airport operations are the responsibility of the city of Presque Isle at the Northern Maine Regional Airport. The Airport Department is tasked with making the runways, taxiways and ramps open and available for aircraft operations. Once maintenance crews have made these available, it is up to the other decision makers to determine whether your flight will be arriving or departing on time.
We are not necessarily in direct contact with the other decision makers. Therefore, we are not always aware of the current status of your flight. The airline dispatchers, weather personnel and air traffic control are usually located in centralized control facilities throughout the United States. Their decisions are not only based on conditions at Presque Isle but factors throughout the system. They work with the aircraft flight crews to make the most informed decision possible. You should be aware the airline counter personnel are not part of this decision making process. In other words, the counter people learn of potential changes in the schedule after the decision has already been made. It has been my experience that as soon as they know something, they make a public announcement. Given the inherent unpredictability of the weather, it is impossible to be able to determine when and if a flight will be delayed or cancelled ahead of time.
So what is the best source of information for the public? There are many different sources of information available. If you are at the airport, airline counter personnel will make an announcement as soon as they know something official. If you are not at the airport, the best source today is the internet. By going to our website www.flypresqueisle.com, you will find a link to the free website Flight Arrivals. You can also access this site directly by going to www.flightarrivals.com. Flight Arrivals allows you to check the status of every flight coming or departing the Northern Maine Regional Airport.
For all US Airways flights into Presque Isle, the airline will be identified on this site as Colgan Air. This site will give you the time of arrival and the status of the flight. Since it takes over an hour for a flight from Boston to Presque Isle, residents of the Central Aroostook area can even wait until it shows as “in flight” before beginning the drive to the airport to pick someone up. The U.S. Airways Web site www.usairways.com can be used to check flight status as well. For those without internet access, U.S. Airways has the following phone number to get flight status updates (800) 428-4322. You simply follow the automated menu to get the most current information on your flight.
With all this said, some may be thinking at this point that we have lost the personal touch here at the Northern Maine Regional Airport. As always the airport management office is happy to help when and where we can. However, the office is only open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. So information on early morning and late night flights is not available through our office. Even during normal operating hours, airport management office may not have the most current information on your flight for the reasons discussed earlier.
Scott Wardwell is airport director for the Northern Maine Regional Airport. He cab be reached at 764-2550 or via e-mail at scottw@FlyPresqueIsle.com.
Photo courtesy of Enola Boyce
THE PRE-K classes of Amy Daniels and Enola Boyce recently toured the Northern Maine Regional Airport in Presque Isle. The students studied various types of travel throughout the school year and the teachers decided a tour of the local airport would be a valuable experience for them. Doug Carlisle, a TSA officer and dad of one of the students, guided the children through the security checkpoint and the children were able to view the scanner video to watch as their sneakers went through security. Michelle Morrison, another TSA officer, took them through the Airport Museum and explained what that was all about and each student was able to sign the guest book as they left the museum.