The federal government says the Canadian Forces Snowbirds team is being grounded until the early 2030s while its aging planes are replaced.
It says the modern CT-157 Siskin II aircraft will take over for the CT-114 Tutor jets.
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This year will be the aerial acrobatic squadron’s final season with its Tutor fleet.
Defence Minister David McGuinty is set to announce details today at the team’s home base, 15 Wing Moose Jaw in Saskatchewan. 650 CKOM and 980 CJME will carry McGuinty’s remarks live at 10 a.m.
The Tutor planes were introduced in the 1960s.
The Snowbirds, formed in 1971, have performed at thousands of air shows and will continue to be based in Moose Jaw.
“This will ensure that Canada continues its strong tradition of air demonstration capability with a modern fleet that will ultimately rebuild to the team’s distinctive nine-plane formation,” the government said in a statement.
There has been speculation about the future of the squadron.
Federal Opposition Conservative Fraser Tolmie raised the issue earlier this month.
He told question period that air shows across North America are “quietly being told” they can’t book the Snowbirds for events in 2027 and that this summer will be their final season.
McGuinty had said that the team’s fleet is approaching the end of its life, but the Snowbirds would continue air demonstrations as long as the planes remain safe.
Tolmie, who represents Moose Jaw and is a former mayor of the city, has said it’s time to get the ball rolling on a replacement fleet contract and “save our Snowbirds.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 19, 2026.









