Inuk pilot reaches new horizons in familiar Nunavut skies
CBC
Doris Ipeelee remembers meeting a pilot years ago and asking them if they thought she, too, could fly a plane one day.
"He said yes, of course, and ever since then I've grabbed onto that and I've always wanted to be a pilot," Ipeelee said.
She was seven years old at that fateful meeting. Now, after graduating from flight school and going through nearly two months of rigorous training with Calm Air, the Inuk pilot from Iqaluit is look forward to flying in her home territory.
"It brings me so much pride," she said.
"When Calm Air offered me the job, I started crying so much because I was so excited to have the opportunity to land in Iqaluit, but also landing all over small communities."
This winter, Ipeelee will start flying in Nunavut. Her inaugural flight is still a couple months off, said Jan McNish, the chief pilot for Calm Air, but the airline is as pleased with the hire as Ipeelee is.
McNish said the airline has been recruiting pilots for the past year due to industry shortages. Ipeelee had been working for another company in Saskatchewan when her name popped up and McNish decided to reach out to her.
"She has a very good presence about her — a strong aura," McNish said, adding the airline looks for people who are ambitious and have a great attitude.
"I'm proud of her and I can't wait to see what she does in the future for us."
The training wasn't easy. McNish said it's a struggle for most people, but Ipeelee made it through.
Ipeelee, who graduated from flight school two years ago, said Calm Air's training got her ready to fly aircraft larger than she's ever flown before. Most of her training at flight school was done using a Cessna 172 — a four-seater, single-engine aircraft — or a Piper Aztec, which seats up to six.
"Compared to the ATR, which I'm flying at Calm Air — we're flying with 40,000-pound aircraft, so it's almost 10 times bigger. It's a huge jump," she said.
Jenna Chouinard, Calm Air's vice-president of HR and payroll, said the Manitoba-based company has been looking to hire from the communities they fly into in Nunavut.
"It's very exciting for us to be able to connect with people and to be able to provide opportunities that might not have otherwise been there," Chouinard said.