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The following active airports serve the area around Montreal, Quebec, Canada, lying underneath or immediately adjacent to Montreal's terminal control area: [1] [2]. Montréal-Pierre Elliot Trudeau International Airport terminal and control tower Montréal–Mirabel International Airport Montreal Saint-Hubert Longueuil Airport The former Cartierville Airport
Boise Airport (IATA: BOI, ICAO: KBOI, FAA LID: BOI) (Boise Air Terminal or Gowen Field) [2] [4] is a joint civil-military airport in the western United States in Idaho, three miles (5 km) south of downtown Boise in Ada County. [2] The airport is operated by the city of Boise Department of Aviation, overseen by an airport commission. [5]
On the island of Montreal, the francophone majority dropped to 46.96% by 2011, [8] a net decline since the 1970s owing to francophone outmigration to more affluent suburbs in Laval and the South Shore (fr. Rive-Sud) and an influx of allophone immigrants. The anglophones account for 16.64% of the population and the allophones 35.24%.
Over the last decade, the number of passengers flying to or through the Boise Airport has risen more than 80%, reaching almost 5 million passengers in 2023, according to an airport news release.
According to Statistics Canada, at the time of the 2011 Canadian census the city of Montreal proper had 1,649,519 inhabitants. [5] A total of 3,824,221 lived in the Montreal Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) at the same 2011 census, up from 3,635,556 at the 2006 census (within 2006 CMA boundaries), which means a population growth rate of +5.2% between 2006 and 2011. [6]
Every 10 years airport issues a request for proposals for concessions. The existing businesses’ leases in the airport will expire in October 2024, Hupp said, and the airport is looking for new ones.
Most recently, the 2021 Canadian census counted 109,509 people living within Downtown Montreal's boundaries, an increase of 21,340 people. This 24.2 percent increase was the second-fastest growth within downtowns in Canada after Downtown Halifax .
Mongolian is the official national language of Mongolia, where it is spoken (but not always written) by nearly 3.6 million people (2014 estimate), [16] and the official provincial language (both spoken and written forms) of Inner Mongolia, where there are at least 4.1 million ethnic Mongols. [17]