Aviation Daily

Annette Santiago
Israir won an exemption to fly scheduled service between Tel Aviv and New York, which means El Al will soon have competition on the route (DAILY, March 7). Israir would use a Boeing 767 seating 18 in first class and 242 in economy for the four-times-weekly service, which is expected to grow to six weekly flights in the summer.

By Adrian Schofield
The union representing FAA's technicians is sending its members a contract proposal but is asking them to vote against it, prompting FAA to file an unfair labor practices complaint against the union.

Steven Lott
Royal Jordanian this summer plans to boost capacity between Amman and its three U.S. destinations thanks to growing demand.

Staff
Air Wisconsin's last BAe 146 -- operating between Denver and Vail, Colo. -- will leave the fleet on April 16. The carrier now flies exclusively under the US Airways Express banner. Most of Air Wisconsin's United Express flying was taken over by SkyWest.

Steven Lott
Air Canada recently decided to drop plans to strip the paint from its Boeing 767s and go with a polished metal livery. The carrier did a three-month test by stripping the white paint from one aircraft and found that the move shed about 360 pounds from the weight of the plane, which translated into annual fuel savings of $24,000. However, staff that analyzed how the polished fuselage stood up against harsh operating environments "determined the extra maintenance costs outweighed the benefits."

Lori Ranson
Several unusual items caused Pemco's 2005 losses to mount to $5.8 million versus a $3 million loss the previous year, including the bankruptcy of the maintenance, repair and overhaul provider's largest commercial aircraft customer, Northwest.

Steven Lott
Delta yesterday narrowed its February net loss from $267 million in 2005 to $209 million last month. Excluding $71 million in reorganization costs, the net loss was $138 million. The reorganization items reflect estimated bankruptcy claims for aircraft lease matters and professional fees in the company's Chapter 11 case. Operating loss for the month was $71 million, less than the $183 million deficit last year. On Feb. 28, Delta had $3 billion in cash and cash equivalents, of which $2.2 billion was unrestricted. -SL

Steven Lott
Alaska Air parent Alaska Air Group this week called for redemption of its bonds in a move aimed at cutting debt and lowering interest expenses.

Benet Wilson
Transportation Security Administration passenger screeners will operate out of the Downtown Manhattan Heliport at Wall Street, the agency announced; it is the first time the TSA has assigned screeners and equipment to a heliport. "These dedicated resources will ensure that passengers and baggage entering Manhattan's airspace on commercial helicopter flights to New York-area airports have satisfied TSA's stringent screening requirements," said Douglas Hofsass, the TSA's federal security director at LaGuardia Airport.

Staff
The development of high-speed trains in Europe could reduce air traffic growth by about 80,000 flights -- or 1% of the flight total -- in the next seven years, Eurocontrol forecasts. Spain and Italy will see the most reduction, followed by France. The Madrid-Barcelona route will face the strongest competition from rail services.

Steven Lott
India's Kingfisher Airlines yesterday took delivery of its first ATR 72-500 turboprop, which the carrier will use for its growing domestic network.

Benet Wilson
Airports that opt out of using Transportation Security Administration screeners would be given priority for discretionary grants by the Airport Improvement Program (AIP) under a proposal being floated by Rep. John Mica (R-Fla.), chairman of the House Transportation aviation subcommittee.

Staff
UPS returned to the U.S. Transportation Dept. two of its Hong Kong fifth-freedom frequencies -- one Macapagal (formerly Clark AB), Philippines, frequency operated via Singapore and one Singapore frequency. The cargo company now holds 18 Hong Kong fifth-freedom frequencies [OST-2005-21316].

Staff
GOL priced its perpetual bond offering at US$200 million with a rate of 8.75%. The notes are senior unsecured debts that have no fixed maturity date but will be callable after five years. GOL plans to use the proceeds from the offering to complement financial support it is receiving from the U.S. Exim Bank for aircraft financing (DAILY, March 21).

Annette Santiago
The U.S. Transportation Dept. terminated a tentative order that would have ended Jackson, Tenn., Essential Air Service subsidy eligibility after review of new data showed that efforts by the community to gain control over the $200-per-passenger subsidy cap (DAILY, Feb. 23) have been successful. In terminating the order, DOT was quick to note, however, that the per-passenger subsidy was higher than the $200 cap for the entire calendar year 2005.

Steven Lott
Delta will soon unveil details of a new senior management reorganization, following the announcement this week that Paul Matsen, executive VP-marketing, will leave the airline after less than two years in the position.

Staff
From the Publisher: Aviation Week & Space Technology magazine on April 7 will hold its 49th annual Laureate Awards, honoring the accomplishments of individuals and teams in aviation, aerospace and defense at the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center near Washington Dulles Airport. For more information, visit http://www.aviationnow.com/conferences/laumain.htm.

By Jens Flottau
Ryanair plans to launch six new flights from Pisa in September and five new services from its Shannon base in October. The additions at Pisa will boost the number of daily flights from that base to 17. Daily flights to Valencia and Trapani and three weekly flights to Oslo and Friedrichshafen start Sept. 14, followed by four weekly flights to Doncaster and Karlsruhe Baden on Sept. 15.

By Jens Flottau
The European Aviation Safety Agency and the U.S. FAA approved of the Airbus A380 evacuation test, Airbus said this week. The aircraft will be certified to a maximum of 853 passengers, following the successful evacuation of 873 people on board in 79 seconds. To pass the test, all test passengers were supposed to have been out of the aircraft after 90 seconds. "We have passed a major milestone on the road to certification," Airbus Chief Operating Officer and A380 program head Charles Champion, said. -JF

Lori Ranson
Chile is the first country that will require IATA's audits as a condition of its airline certification process. The country plans to make the change to include IATA's Operational Safety Audit in carrier certification within a year. About 150 carriers are going through the IOSA process, with 98 of those airlines completing the audits and taking a place on the IOSA list. All IATA carriers must complete audits by yearend 2007 as a condition of membership.

By Adrian Schofield
European flight numbers are forecast to grow 26% by 2012, and aviation policy makers need to prepare for changing growth patterns, Eurocontrol says. Average annual growth will be about 3.3% in the next seven years, with more than 11.4 million flights in 2012, Eurocontrol's latest medium-term forecast says. Growth will not be uniform across Europe, however, with Romania, Ukraine and Armenia expected to see expansion of more than 50% within seven years, and others, such as Switzerland and Norway, seeing 20% growth.

Staff
The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority signed a deal to take over operation of the Washington Dulles toll road and use the funds to pay for a $4 billion project to extend the Metrorail subway system out to the airport. MWAA will take all operational responsibility of the toll road, including rate setting, and assume all outstanding debt. The authority will oversee a two-phased plan to build a 23.1 mile extension of Metrorail to Washington Dulles and beyond.

Lori Ranson
U.S. airlines under pressure to accommodate customers traveling to Venezuela during the Easter holiday received a reprieve when the country's civil aviation institute (INAC) extended a deadline to ban their flights until April 25. Originally, civil aviation authorities in Venezuela set a March 1 deadline for the ban, citing limitations its airlines faced in serving the U.S. (DAILY, March 17). That date was pushed to March 30, and as that deadline approached, INAC opted to move it back to next month.

By Adrian Schofield
Spanish investment company Ferrovial has effectively neutralized a potential rival bidder for British airport operator BAA, with Ferrovial yesterday naming Australia's Macquarie as a "financial co-adviser" on the bid.