Published on : 21 Feb 2026
Breaking β Day 51, Strike in 7 Days: Canada’s aviation crisis entered Day 51 today February 21, 2026 with 39 flight cancellations and 342 delays across Montreal-Trudeau, Calgary International, Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier, Toronto Pearson, St. John’s International, CFB Goose Bay, and Deer Lake Regional airports, as Air Canada logged 94 delays plus 7 cancellations (worst delay total), Jazz Aviation recorded 49 delays plus 9 cancellations (worst cancellation rate), WestJet suffered 67 delays plus 1 cancellation, WestJet Encore faced 32 delays plus 2 cancellations, and Air Canada Rouge experienced multiple delays β all arriving just 7 days before the February 28 Air Canada Unifor strike deadline that threatens to transform Day 51’s 381 total disruptions into March Break catastrophe affecting 3 million Canadian travelers. Here is the complete Day 51 breakdown every stranded passenger needs today.
Published: February 21, 2026 (Friday β Day 51) Total Disruption: 342 delays + 39 cancellations = 381 total Air Canada: 94 delays + 7 cancellations = 101 total (worst delay count) Jazz Aviation: 49 delays + 9 cancellations = 58 total (worst cancellation rate) WestJet: 67 delays + 1 cancellation = 68 total WestJet Encore: 32 delays + 2 cancellations = 34 total Air Canada Rouge: Multiple delays Airports Affected: Montreal (58 delays), Calgary (65 delays), Ottawa (22 delays + 8 cancellations), Toronto Pearson, St. John’s (12 delays + 4 cancellations), CFB Goose Bay, Deer Lake Regional Days to Unifor Strike: 7 days (February 28, 2026) Days Since Crisis Start: 51 (January 1, 2026) Cumulative 51-Day Impact: ~6,000+ flights, 550,000+ passengers March Break: 9-23 days away (March 2-16, 2026)
Hundreds of passengers are facing massive disruptions across Canada as Air Canada, Jazz, WestJet, Inuit, PAL, and other airlines struggle with 39 cancellations and 342 delays.
What Day 51 means in context:
Fifty-one consecutive days of elevated disruption. Since January 1, 2026, Canadian aviation has recorded approximately 6,000+ disrupted flights affecting over 550,000 passengers. The pattern is relentless: brief operational improvement, then immediate collapse back into chaos.
What makes Day 51 different: It arrives 7 days before Air Canada’s Unifor customer service agent strike deadline. The 5,826 workers who check passengers in, rebook cancelled flights, process baggage claims, and manage disruption have 7 days left before their contract expires on February 28.
If talks fail and strikes begin March 1, today’s 342 delays + 39 cancellations will seem manageable by comparison.
Air Canada seems to be hit the hardest, with 94 delays and 7 cancellations.
Air Canada’s 101 total disruptions (94 delays + 7 cancellations) represent the highest single-carrier disruption count on Day 51. The 94 delays alone exceed all other carriers β confirming Air Canada remains the epicenter of Canada’s aviation crisis.
The 7-day strike context: The customer service agents who rebook today’s 94 delayed flights and 7 cancelled flights are the SAME 5,826 Unifor workers who are 7 days from potential strike action. These agents have managed 51 consecutive days of chaos while negotiating wages that haven’t been discussed at the bargaining table yet (per your Feb 17 coverage).
Jazz (ACA), a regional carrier, also experienced a substantial number of delays, totaling 49 delays and 9 cancellations.
Jazz’s 9 cancellations represent the highest cancellation total for any carrier on Day 51 β confirming regional connectivity is collapsing at an even faster rate than mainline service.
Why Jazz cancellations hurt disproportionately:
Jazz operates as Air Canada Express β regional turboprops connecting smaller Canadian cities to Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver hubs. Cities like Sudbury, Thunder Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Timmins typically have only 1-2 Jazz flights daily. When Jazz cancels, passengers lose their only same-day option.
WestJet reporting 67 delays and 1 cancellation.
WestJet’s 67 delays (second-highest after Air Canada’s 94) plus minimal cancellations suggests the carrier is choosing to operate very late rather than cancel β typical of airlines prioritizing completion over on-time performance.
WestJet Encore faced 32 delays and 2 cancellations.
WestJet Encore (WestJet’s regional subsidiary) mirrors Jazz’s regional disruption pattern β smaller aircraft, shorter routes, thinner margins = cancellations when operational pressure mounts.
Montreal-Trudeau and Calgary International airports are also experiencing severe delays with 58 delays and 65 delays, respectively.
Montreal’s 58 delays reflect Quebec’s position as Canada’s second-largest aviation market. Every Montreal delay cascades into Air Canada’s transcontinental and transatlantic network β affecting Paris, London, Rome, and Caribbean connections.
Calgary’s 65 delays represent the single highest delay total for any airport on Day 51 β confirming Calgary’s role as WestJet’s primary hub amplifies disruption during operational stress.
Calgary’s unique vulnerability: WestJet operates Calgary as its largest hub (similar to Air Canada’s Toronto dominance). When Calgary delays compound, WestJet’s entire Western Canada network collapses β affecting Vancouver, Edmonton, Regina, Saskatoon, Winnipeg connections.
Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier has reported 22 delays and 8 cancellations.
Ottawa’s 8 cancellations (out of 39 total nationwide) represent 21% of all Canadian cancellations today despite Ottawa being a mid-sized airport β signaling concentrated disruption at the nation’s capital.
St. John’s International faces 12 delays and 4 cancellations.
St. John’s (Newfoundland and Labrador) cancellations sever Atlantic Canada connectivity β PAL Airlines (serving St. John’s β Halifax β MontrΓ©al corridor) bears brunt of regional disruption.
The Toronto Pearson International Airport, one of Canada’s busiest hubs, is facing the bulk of these disruptions, creating ripple effects across other airlines and connecting flights.
While specific Day 51 Toronto numbers weren’t detailed in sources, Toronto Pearson historically records 30-40% of all Canadian disruptions due to its size (50 million annual passengers, Canada’s largest hub). Today’s pattern likely includes 100-150 Toronto disruptions embedded in Air Canada’s 101 total.
February 28, 2026 β Unifor Strike Deadline:
If Air Canada’s 5,826 Unifor customer service agents strike starting March 1:
March 2-16, 2026 β March Break:
Canada’s spring break = 3 million travelers, peak volume period. Strike during March Break = catastrophic:
The collision: Day 51 + 7 days to strike + March Break starting in 9 days = perfect storm.
β Check status every 30 minutes starting 48 hours before departure β Arrive airport 3-4 hours early (vs normal 2 hours) β Day 51 means longer queues β Book refundable fares for any travel Feb 28-March 16 β strike risk too high β Consider alternative airlines (Porter, Flair, non-Canadian carriers) to avoid Air Canada/Jazz strike exposure
β Book backup flights NOW on different carriers β Air Canada strike could ground entire network β Travel insurance essential β strike coverage required β Flexible destinations β if Florida unreachable, can you pivot to US destinations? β Drive vs fly β for TorontoβMontreal, Ottawa, consider VIA Rail or driving
Under Canadian Air Passenger Protection Regulations:
Critical: File APPR claims at otc-cta.gc.ca β document everything today.
The 51-day timeline:
Cumulative: 6,000+ flights, 550,000+ passengers, ZERO resolution
The strike collision course:
Canada Day 51 chaos February 21, 2026 β 342 delays plus 39 cancellations across Montreal (58 delays), Calgary (65 delays), Ottawa (22 delays + 8 cancellations), Toronto, St. John’s (12 delays + 4 cancellations) β confirms Air Canada’s 94 delays plus 7 cancellations, Jazz’s 49 delays plus 9 cancellations, and WestJet’s 67 delays create system-wide paralysis just 7 days before February 28 Unifor strike deadline that threatens to transform 51 consecutive days of chaos into March Break catastrophe affecting 3 million travelers. Book alternatives. File APPR claims. Prepare for worse.
Your Day 51 Action Checklist:
β Flying next week? Air Canada strike 7 days away β book refundable backup NOW β Jazz regional cancelled? Zero same-day alternatives β overnight likely β March Break travel? Strike + Day 51 chaos = book different airline TODAY β APPR compensation? $400-$1,000 if airline-controlled β file at otc-cta.gc.ca β Alternative transport? VIA Rail, Porter, Flair all viable β avoid Air Canada/Jazz
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Posted By : Vinay
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