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Aircraft refurbisher takes off, property for sale.


The former home of Spectrum Aviation at the Sault Ste. Marie airport Sault Ste. Marie Airport, (IATA: YAM, ICAO: CYAM), is an international airport located 8.0 nautical miles (14.82 km) west-southwest of the city of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada at the far eastern end of Lake Superior and the beginning of the St. Mary's River.  is on the selling block after the well-known aircraft refurbisher unexpectedly pulled up stakes over the summer and vacated their hangar space in only a matter of days.

Two-year-old Spectrum Aviation closed up shop in mid-June amid rumours of financial troubles associated with the company's owner and president Mike Bird.

"He (Bird) was there (on a) Friday and gone on Monday," says Jerry Dolcetti, president and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of the Sault Ste. Marie Airport Development Corp. "We came back on Monday and found out the building was empty."

Specializing in exterior and interior aircraft painting and detailing, Spectrum was a tenant in a 24,640-square-foot hangar owned by Ontario Northland north·land also North·land  
n.
A region in the north of a country or an area.



northland
 Transportation Commission. They started business at the airport in August, 1999.

"The manner in which he left leads some people to suspect that he was in a bit of difficulty in running the business," says Dolcetti.

Bird told Northern Ontario Business Northern Ontario Business is a Canadian magazine, which publishes monthly in Greater Sudbury, Ontario. The magazine covers business news and issues in Northern Ontario.  in a 1999 interview, not long after starting the company, that the hangar was the only unoccupied facility in Canada with a large affordable space and a runway long enough to accommodate aircraft as large as an Airbus 320.

Starting out with 15 employees, the company worked on Dash 8 aircraft and was vying for contracts with many regional and major North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 carriers.

Renamed Spectrum Aircraft Refinishing Refinishing in woodworking and decorative arts means fixing or redoing the finishing paint, varnish or other top coating of an object, from resanding to new paint and new varnish. The artisan or restorer is traditionally aiming for an improved or restored and renewed finish.  Services by the spring of 2000, the company boasted in a subsequent interview they had completed a $225,000 contract with Air Ontario Air Ontario Inc. was an airline based in Canada and now part of Air Canada Jazz. Former Code Data
  • IATA Code: GX
  • ICAO Code: ONT
  • Callsign: Ontario
History
Air Ontario Inc.
 to paint six Dash 8 100s.

Al Hubley, assistant general manager of the Sault Airport Development Corp., says that on some big contracts, Spectrum employed as many as 50 people.

"Business-wise he had planes in and out of there all the time," says Hubley.

Most of the company's equipment was leased or rented, Hubley says, but Spectrum made some building improvements, installing an air-filtration system and floor drains A floor drain is a plumbing fixture that is installed in the floor of a structure, mainly designed to remove any standing water near it. They are usually round, but can also be square or rectangular. They usually range from 2 inches to 12 inches, most are 4 inches in diameter.  according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Ministry of Environment specifications.

Just days after the company ceased operations, Hubley says, some former Spectrum employees gained access to the hangar and ransacked ran·sack  
tr.v. ran·sacked, ran·sack·ing, ran·sacks
1. To search or examine thoroughly.

2. To search carefully for plunder; pillage.
 it.

Spectrum Aviation was in the second year of a five-year lease with ONTC ONTC Ontario Northland Transportation Commission (Government of Ontario, Canada)
ONTC Optical Networking Technical Committee
ONTC Orlando Naval Training Center
ONTC Optical Networks Technology Consortium
 with an option to purchase, which is what they were negotiating with the provincial Crown corporation when they folded shop, according to Stuart Kidd, ONTC's manager of corporate realty.

"We were working on it to get it into (Bird's) hands," says Kidd. "It sounded like a good deal for the Sault, the airport, Spectrum and certainly for us to get us out from under the property, and everything fell apart and they sort of left."

Kidd says ONTC is pursuing the matter legally with Bird and his associates for monies owing on their lease agreement dating back to June.

When contacted at his new job with an aircraft refurbishing company at Gravenhurst's Muskoka Airport Muskoka Airport, (IATA: YQA, ICAO: CYQA), is located 4 nautical miles (7.4 km) south of Muskoka, Ontario, Canada. References
  • Canada Flight Supplement. Effective 0901Z 5 July 2007 to 0901Z 30 August 2007.
, Bird defined Kidd's comments as "not even true" and said he had no knowledge of any legal action being taken against him.

"Haven't heard nothing about that," says Bird.

"I know (Kidd's) been trying to sell the building and to my knowledge there are Spectrum employees trying to start their own business, but it will fail miserably because the industry is just dead."

Bird insists the only person he has to legally answer to is a former business partner in the venture.

As a Dash 8 specialist operating within a regional market, Bird says Spectrum never had the resources or equipment to refurbish re·fur·bish  
tr.v. re·fur·bished, re·fur·bish·ing, re·fur·bish·es
To make clean, bright, or fresh again; renovate.



re·fur
 smaller planes and when the economy went sour in April, so did their business.

"The money ran out," says Bird, explaining why the company closed shop so quickly.

"But the bottom line is the company was in financial difficulty since day one. The company was always under the gun because of the expense of the building. The building is what killed the company. It wasn't possible to run that business at that level of overhead."

Bird claims he had invested $100,000 in leasehold improvements Leasehold Improvement

Improvements on a leased asset that increase the value of the asset.

Notes:
A leasehold improvement is classified as an asset that must be depreciated over time.
 into the hangar. Unable to secure a small-business loan to keep the company afloat, and with a shortage of planes, Bird says he had no option but to leave.

Bird says the issue has subsequently degenerated into a tangle of legal problems and "mud-slugging" with his former partner.

Spectrum's-roots are in southwestern Ontario Southwestern Ontario is a region of the Canadian province of Ontario, centred on the city of London. It extends north to south from the Bruce Peninsula on Lake Huron to the Lake Erie shoreline, and east to south-west roughly from Kitchener to Windsor.  where Bird's father, Bruce, had more than 40 years experience refinishing aircraft at their headquarters near Tiilsonburg.

Kidd says ONTC's first interest is to sell the hangar for around $600,000, which includes more than 12,300 square feet of office, storage and machine space on two floors, but they would entertain a long-term arrangement similar to Spectrum's, to lease the entire building.

Though the building has not officially been advertised for sale, aside from a 'for sale' sign on the property, Kidd intends to post the hangar on the ONTC telecommunications division's Web site. The Sault airport corporation is partnering with ONTC to secure a new occupant for the space, and already some parties have shown interest in the building, but only on a short-term lease or partial purchase basis.

"It's too bad this business didn't go ahead," says Kidd. "This would've grown and brought in other related business," similar to the success experienced by North Bay's Air Base Property Corp.

Spectrum's sudden departure in no way represents a setback to the city's industrial marketing strategy, which includes bringing in value-added businesses in the aeronautics sector, according to Tom Hernden, the Sault's economic development officer.

"The Spectrum situation was due to their own internal circumstances and certainly the airport is still considered an underutilized asset," Hernden says. "There still is some great potential there, and we don't see this as a blow at all."

The city is in the process of hiring an industrial marketing co-ordinator who will in turn hire consultants to chase down North America-wide leads in various sectors including the aviation industry.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Laurentian Business Publishing, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Spectrum Aviation
Author:Ross, Ian
Publication:Northern Ontario Business
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1CONT
Date:Jan 1, 2002
Words:982
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