Air (or Error?) Canada. Our National Carrier…

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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What a four-minute video cost Air Canada's CEO
CEO Michael Rousseau announced he would retire by September in the wake of a condolence video that contained exactly two words in French

Author of the article:Sunira Chaudhri
Published Apr 11, 2026 • Last updated 22 hours ago • 3 minute read

Michael Rousseau
Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau giving a speech at the Montreal Chamber of Commerce in Montreal, Quebec, Wednesday, November 03, 2021. Photo by Mario Beauregard /The Canadian Press Images
It took four minutes and two words of French to end a 19-year career at Air Canada.


On March 23, two Air Canada pilots were tragically killed when their flight collided with a fire truck on the runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport.


One week later, Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau announced he would retire by September – not because of the crash itself, but because of a condolence video that contained exactly two words in French.

The video, which included only “bonjour” and one other French word, drew immediate backlash from Quebec politicians, francophone communities and federal officials.

Prime Minister Mark Carney said the message showed a lack of compassion and judgment. Quebec Premier François Legault called for Rousseau’s resignation. The Quebec National Assembly voted 92 to nothing in favour of a motion demanding he step down.

Days before the announcement, Air Canada told the media that Rousseau had no plans to go anywhere. Shortly after, he announced his retirement.



This was not Rousseau’s first language controversy. In 2021, Rousseau told reporters after a near-entirely English speech to the Montreal chamber of commerce that he did not need to learn French to get by in Montreal. He apologized the next day.


The airline says he has since completed 350 hours of language courses and another 250 hours of practice. Evidently, it was not enough.

For executives in public-facing roles, the camera does not care that you are managing a crisis, answering to a board, or exhausted from a news cycle. When you speak publicly, you are speaking as the face and the soul of the company.

An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport on March 24, 2026 in New York City. Photo by Michael M. Santiago /Getty Images
Rousseau’s failure was not just a PR problem
Air Canada is subject to the Official Languages Act, which requires bilingual service on qualifying routes. Rousseau’s failure was not just a PR problem. It touched on legal compliance, cultural accountability and crisis leadership all at once.

The retirement framing of Rosseau’s departure was a strategic move by Air Canada. When a departure follows days of public pressure, a parliamentary summons and a legislative motion demanding resignation, calling it a retirement is a legal and reputational choice.

The distinction between a resignation, a termination, and a negotiated exit matters. It affects severance entitlements, potential payouts, and how the departure is characterized on his employment record going forward.





For Rousseau personally, this situation and the fall out could follow him. But should it?

By all accounts he was an effective, well-liked leader. His shortcomings as a bilingual speaker were known to Air Canada throughout his term, but the organization still believed he was the right person for the role.

While Rousseau’s next opportunity in a leadership role will likely require him to address this controversy directly, the bigger question to me is how organizations must communicate non-negotiables with their leaders.

Employers should be asking now, before a crisis hits, what conduct expectations apply to their executives, beyond what is written in their employment agreement.

Most executive contracts cover the basics – termination for cause, confidentiality, post-employment restrictions. Far fewer address public communication standards, reputational obligations, or conduct tied to the company’s regulatory environment. That gap is exactly where situations like this one take root.


Airport firefighting and maintenance crews inspect the wreckage of an Air Canada Express jet, Wednesday, March 25, 2026, just off the runway where it had collided with a Port Authority fire truck Sunday night at LaGuardia Airport in New York
Airport firefighting and maintenance crews inspect the wreckage of an Air Canada Express jet, Wednesday, March 25, 2026, just off the runway where it had collided with a Port Authority fire truck Sunday night at LaGuardia Airport in New York Photo by Yuki Iwamura /The Associated Press
The fix is not complicated
The fix is not complicated. If cultural accountability or public representation are material to the role, they should be reflected in the contract. If an executive’s conduct could expose the organization to regulatory scrutiny or reputational harm, the agreement should say so clearly.

The lesson here is clear: for public-facing roles, reputational obligations and communication standards are not optional. They belong in the employment agreement.

Rousseau’s case is unusual, but it is not something we haven’t seen before. In an era of cancel culture, where public missteps travel fast and consequences follow faster, the organizations that plan for this are the ones that handle it best.

A CEO’s value is largely reputational. Once that reputation becomes the story, the role rarely survives it.

– This column was co-written by employment lawyer Sunira Chaudhri and her associate Samantha Khaouli

Have a workplace problem? Maybe I can help! Email me at sunira@worklylaw.com and your question may be featured in a future column.

The content of this article is general information only and is not legal advice.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
What a four-minute video cost Air Canada's CEO
CEO Michael Rousseau announced he would retire by September in the wake of a condolence video that contained exactly two words in French

Author of the article:Sunira Chaudhri
Published Apr 11, 2026 • Last updated 22 hours ago • 3 minute read

Michael Rousseau
Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau giving a speech at the Montreal Chamber of Commerce in Montreal, Quebec, Wednesday, November 03, 2021. Photo by Mario Beauregard /The Canadian Press Images
It took four minutes and two words of French to end a 19-year career at Air Canada.


On March 23, two Air Canada pilots were tragically killed when their flight collided with a fire truck on the runway at New York’s LaGuardia Airport.


One week later, Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau announced he would retire by September – not because of the crash itself, but because of a condolence video that contained exactly two words in French.

The video, which included only “bonjour” and one other French word, drew immediate backlash from Quebec politicians, francophone communities and federal officials.

Prime Minister Mark Carney said the message showed a lack of compassion and judgment. Quebec Premier François Legault called for Rousseau’s resignation. The Quebec National Assembly voted 92 to nothing in favour of a motion demanding he step down.

Days before the announcement, Air Canada told the media that Rousseau had no plans to go anywhere. Shortly after, he announced his retirement.



This was not Rousseau’s first language controversy. In 2021, Rousseau told reporters after a near-entirely English speech to the Montreal chamber of commerce that he did not need to learn French to get by in Montreal. He apologized the next day.


The airline says he has since completed 350 hours of language courses and another 250 hours of practice. Evidently, it was not enough.

For executives in public-facing roles, the camera does not care that you are managing a crisis, answering to a board, or exhausted from a news cycle. When you speak publicly, you are speaking as the face and the soul of the company.

An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport on March 24, 2026 in New York City. Photo by Michael M. Santiago /Getty Images
Rousseau’s failure was not just a PR problem
Air Canada is subject to the Official Languages Act, which requires bilingual service on qualifying routes. Rousseau’s failure was not just a PR problem. It touched on legal compliance, cultural accountability and crisis leadership all at once.

The retirement framing of Rosseau’s departure was a strategic move by Air Canada. When a departure follows days of public pressure, a parliamentary summons and a legislative motion demanding resignation, calling it a retirement is a legal and reputational choice.

The distinction between a resignation, a termination, and a negotiated exit matters. It affects severance entitlements, potential payouts, and how the departure is characterized on his employment record going forward.





For Rousseau personally, this situation and the fall out could follow him. But should it?

By all accounts he was an effective, well-liked leader. His shortcomings as a bilingual speaker were known to Air Canada throughout his term, but the organization still believed he was the right person for the role.

While Rousseau’s next opportunity in a leadership role will likely require him to address this controversy directly, the bigger question to me is how organizations must communicate non-negotiables with their leaders.

Employers should be asking now, before a crisis hits, what conduct expectations apply to their executives, beyond what is written in their employment agreement.

Most executive contracts cover the basics – termination for cause, confidentiality, post-employment restrictions. Far fewer address public communication standards, reputational obligations, or conduct tied to the company’s regulatory environment. That gap is exactly where situations like this one take root.


Airport firefighting and maintenance crews inspect the wreckage of an Air Canada Express jet, Wednesday, March 25, 2026, just off the runway where it had collided with a Port Authority fire truck Sunday night at LaGuardia Airport in New York
Airport firefighting and maintenance crews inspect the wreckage of an Air Canada Express jet, Wednesday, March 25, 2026, just off the runway where it had collided with a Port Authority fire truck Sunday night at LaGuardia Airport in New York Photo by Yuki Iwamura /The Associated Press
The fix is not complicated
The fix is not complicated. If cultural accountability or public representation are material to the role, they should be reflected in the contract. If an executive’s conduct could expose the organization to regulatory scrutiny or reputational harm, the agreement should say so clearly.

The lesson here is clear: for public-facing roles, reputational obligations and communication standards are not optional. They belong in the employment agreement.

Rousseau’s case is unusual, but it is not something we haven’t seen before. In an era of cancel culture, where public missteps travel fast and consequences follow faster, the organizations that plan for this are the ones that handle it best.

A CEO’s value is largely reputational. Once that reputation becomes the story, the role rarely survives it.

– This column was co-written by employment lawyer Sunira Chaudhri and her associate Samantha Khaouli

Have a workplace problem? Maybe I can help! Email me at sunira@worklylaw.com and your question may be featured in a future column.

The content of this article is general information only and is not legal advice.
That's fucked
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
40,171
3,865
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Truck in fatal LaGuardia plane crash heard ‘stop stop stop’ — but didn’t know message was for them
The NTSB on Thursday released a preliminary report on the March 22 crash.

Author of the article:Leora Schertzer
Published Apr 23, 2026 • Last updated 12 hours ago • 2 minute read

An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport on March 24, 2026 in New York City. Flights into and out of LaGuardia airport have resumed after an Air Canada Express plane flight from Montreal collided with a fire truck on the tarmac killing the pilot as well as the co-pilot and leaving more than forty people injured.
An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport on March 24, 2026 in New York City. Flights into and out of LaGuardia airport have resumed after an Air Canada Express plane flight from Montreal collided with a fire truck on the tarmac killing the pilot as well as the co-pilot and leaving more than forty people injured. Photo by Michael M. Santiago /Getty Images
A preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board reveals that a truck operator involved in a deadly plane crash at LaGuardia Airport last month heard an air traffic controller’s radio instructions to stop.


The NTSB on Thursday released a preliminary report on the March 22 crash at the New York airport, shedding light on the collision that claimed the lives of two young Canadian pilots and left six seriously injured, including one flight attendant, three passengers and two people in the truck. The report indicates a lack of transponders on ground vehicles, along with communication failures, were possible factors in the crash.


Air Canada Express Flight 8646 collided with an aircraft rescue and firefighting vehicle that had been cleared to cross the runway as the plane was preparing to land. The deaths of pilots Antoine Forest, 30, and Mackenzie Gunther, 24, have rocked the aviation community, raising questions about industry safety protocols and communications.

“The turret operator in Truck 1 recalled hearing the words 'stop stop stop' (on the tower frequency) radio, but he did not know who that transmission was intended for,” the report says. “He subsequently heard ‘Truck 1 stop stop stop’ and realized it was for them and subsequently
noticed that they had entered the runway."


The NTSB says the first command to stop was issued nine seconds before the collision, and the second, explicitly referring to Truck 1, came five seconds later.

The turret operator “further recalled that as they turned left, he saw the airplane’s lights on the runway," the report says.


Instructions from air traffic controllers are one of several critical signals that vehicle operators can rely upon to avoid conflicts. Runway entrance lights, which are supposed to turn red to warn ground vehicles about occupied runways, were illuminated before the crash happened.

At 11:36:51 p.m., the red runway entrance lights illuminated at the intersection of the crash. They turned off at 11:37:21 p.m., one second before the plane's nose gear touched down and two seconds before the collision. The airplane’s last recorded ground speed before the collision was 104 mph, while the truck was travelling at 30 mph.

While runway lights were working, other key safety and communication measures failed.


A review of the data from LaGuardia’s runway safety technology, the Airport Surface Detection Equipment, Model X (ASDE-X), determined that the system did not alert the air traffic control tower of the potential runway conflict.

Multiple ground vehicles were not equipped with transponders, according to the report.

“Without transponder-equipped vehicles, the ASDE-X system could not uniquely identify each of the seven responding vehicles or reliably determine their positions, or tracks. As a result, the system was unable to correlate the track of the airplane with the track of Truck 1 (or any of the other vehicles in the group) and did not predict a potential conflict with the landing airplane,” it says.

The two air traffic controllers on duty at the time of the accident both had at least 18 years of experience, and had been on duty for less than one hour when the two vehicles collided.
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Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
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Edmonton
From my understanding & what I've heard, the U.S. the FAA is in desperate need of upgrading. The equipment being used is decades old & needs to be replaced with current technology. It looks like this was one of the reasons why this incident happened. Of course, not funding the FAA sufficiently so that they could upgrade is another.
 
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Taxslave2

Senate Member
Aug 13, 2022
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SO the truck driver missed the most important rule of radio transmissions. When you hear STOP STOP STOP on the radio, and don't know who it is for, you STOP.
 
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