Published June 30, 2008 10:30 pm - Greyhound and Adirondack Trailways offer trips dedicated solely to the Plattsburgh International Airport, costing $20 each way.
Bus service between Montreal and Plattsburgh airport underway
Lines arranged from Montreal to Plattsburgh for air travelers
By DAN HEATH
Staff Writer
PLATTSBURGH -- Bus service is under way between Montreal and Plattsburgh International Airport, considered "Montreal's U.S. airport."
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Plattsburgh-North Country Chamber of Commerce President Garry Douglas talked Monday about this next stage of transportation development at the Plattsburgh airport.
Last week, Greyhound and Adirondack Trailways started operating one trip each way between the airport and Montreal, at a cost of $20 each way.
The new bus routes "make it that much easier for those who don't own cars or who are concerned about the price of gas," Douglas said.
NEED EVIDENT
When flights were canceled during an ice storm last winter, he said, it was amazing to see how many Canadian travelers were at the airport without cars.
Chamber Vice President of Marketing Michele Powers said she's been promoting the airport at trade shows for the last two years. The first two questions she gets asked are about parking and whether there is transportation between Montreal and the airport.
"The enthusiasm and response from Montrealers -- and (people in) Quebec in general -- has been overwhelming," she said. "I think this will be heavily utilized. It will only add to the number of people who come to this airport."
Greyhound Area Sales Manager Dan Broska said the company has, for years, considered offering service to the airport in Plattsburgh.
The move will also allow the company to offer service from locations south of Plattsburgh, such as Schroon Lake, he said.
Paul Provost, head of business development for Adirondack Trailways, said the bus service allows people to work on their computers on the way to the airport or just relax. It also makes winter travel much easier, he said.
After seeing the number of cars in the long-term parking lot with Canadian license plates, the decision to offer the bus service was easy, Provost said.
"You have to be ready, willing and able to go after that need."
The new service should help ease the parking situation at the airport, where the long-term lot is constantly crowded.