Transportation
Key Terms
- Ancillary revenues: money earned on non-essential components of the transportation experience including headsets, blankets, and meals
- Blue Sky Policy: Canada's approach to open skies agreements that govern which countries' airlines are allowed to fly to, and from, Canadian destinations
- Cruise BC: a multi-stakeholder organization responsible for the development and marketing of British Columbia as a cruise destination
- Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA): the world's largest cruise industry trade association with representation in North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Australasia
- International Air Transport Association (IATA): the trade association for the world's airlines
- Low-cost carrier (LCC): an airline that competes on price, cutting amenities and striving for volume to achieve a profit
- National Airports Policy (NAP): the 1994 policy that saw transfer of 150 airports from federal control to communities and other local agencies, essentially deregulating the industry
- Open skies: a set of policies that enable commercial airlines to fly in and out of other countries
- Passenger load factor: a way of measuring how efficiently a transportation company uses its vehicles on any given day, calculated for a single flight by dividing the number of passengers by the number of seats
- Railway Safety Act: a 1985 Act to ensure the safe operation of railways in Canada
- Ridesharing apps: applications for mobile devices that allow users to share rides with strangers, undercutting the taxi industry
- Transportation Safety Board (TSB): the national independent agency that investigates an average of 3,200 transportation safety incidents across the country every year