Aviation Daily

Staff
Executive VP-Finance and CFO Sandy Campbell will leave the company as of June 15. The company is searching for a successor.

Staff
Delta thinks its summer boost of regional feed to New York Kennedy and the new JFK international flights will not take traffic away from its Cincinnati hub. Chief Operating Officer Jim Whitehurst reports that the small number of international flights to Cincinnati is already profitable and that the hub pulls traffic from the Midwest, while JFK will pull from the Northeast and mid-Atlantic cities.

Staff
Elected Julie Ellis, partner at Butler, Snow, O'Mara, Stevens & Cannada, as president and Debra Fowler, senior aviation attorney at the U.S. Dept. of Justice, as president-elect.

Staff
Named Rudolpho Dominguez president and chief operations officer and Robert Scott CEO and CFO. Former CEO and President Syed Hasan left the company and was removed from the board of directors.

Eclat Consulting

Staff
Elected Louis Chenevert as president and chief operating officer and a director of the company, while Sikorsky Aircraft President Steve Finger was named to replace Chenevert as president of Pratt & Whitney.

Luis Zalamea
With six low-cost carriers taking off this year, industry watchers in Mexico are debating the survival odds for the new entities, and most are worried about overcapacity in the market (DAILY, Feb. 24).

Staff
Named Jay Donoghue, former editorial director of Air Transport World magazine, director-publications.

Staff
Airlines Reporting Corp. said the 142 participating airlines in February are an increase of 12 carriers from a year ago and a nine-year high for the group. Average weekly sales per ARC accredited location set a new record by surpassing $70,000 for the first time. Total carrier sales reported and settled by travel agents and corporate travel departments were nearly $6.3 billion for the four-week month.

Staff
British Airways says it will have 77 unencumbered aircraft in its fleet by the end of March, up from 70 on March 31, 2005, and 40 on March 31, 2004. The airline will also have 130 financed aircraft by the end of this month -- compared with 136 a year earlier -- and 82 leased aircraft, for a total fleet size of 289 aircraft.

Staff
Hired Roger Morenc, most recently ATA's director-market management, to become senior director-revenue and market management.

Lori Ranson
Northwest is wasting no time in its efforts to establish a new subsidiary to fly smaller planes, emerging as the leading bidder for the operating certificates of now defunct FLYi. If the bankruptcy court approves the sale in a hearing set for March 20, Northwest would pay $2 million for FLYi's U.S., Transportation Dept. and FAA certificates, FCC licenses, manuals and equipment.

Staff
Appointed Alexei Fyodorov, head of combat plane maker MiG, to lead the new United Aviation Co. (UAC), a company of merged private and public Russian airframers.

Staff
Louis Chenevert was president of Pratt & Whitney until his recent promotion to president and CEO of UTC. A story in The DAILY March 10 gave an incorrect affiliation.

Steven Lott
Rapiscan Systems, a division of OSI Systems, recently won a S$7 million contract from Manchester Airport Group (MAG) for several units of the Rapiscan RTT120 CT system for high-speed baggage screening.

Lori Ranson
SAS is forging a new code-share deal with Swiss on flights between Bangkok and Singapore that are scheduled to start March 26.

Staff
30 Years Ago March 16, 1976 -- U.S. airports are not authorized to prevent landings by BA or Air France Concordes, said FAA Administrator John McLucas. There is "some question" about U.S. airports taking the authority into their own hands to keep the aircraft out, McLucas noted, but he believes the airlines would win all resulting court challenges from the bans. 20 Years Ago

Lori Ranson
Tight reins on cost control pushed GOL's fourth quarter profits up 37% to BRL170 million (US$75.8 million) on a 60% rise in capacity. The airline's aggressive cost control is carrying over into 2006, with management predicting a 5% drop in unit costs.

Staff
You can now register online for Aviation Week events. Go to www.AviationNow.com/conferences or contact Lydia Janow, 212-904-3225 or 800-240-7645 ext. 5 (U.S. and Canada only) APRIL 5-6 -- U.S. Defense Budgets and Programs Conference, Arlington, Va. APRIL 25-26 -- MRO Military Conference, Phoenix APRIL 25-26 -- MRO USA Conference & Exhibition 2006, Phoenix MAY 17-18 -- MRO Military Europe, Berlin SEPT. 19-21 -- MRO Asia, Xiamen, China OCT. 24-26 -- MRO Europe, Amsterdam

Annette Santiago
Etihad is making slight changes to the start of service to the U.S. and now intends to launch its daily Abu Dhabi-New York flight on or around July 1 instead of June 1 (DAILY, Dec. 19, 2005). The airline would also serve New York Kennedy Airport instead of Newark Liberty Airport. Etihad has four Airbus A340-500s on order that it plans to use for U.S. services. The carrier's application for a foreign carrier permit and exemptions for scheduled and charter flights is pending with the U.S. Transportation Dept. [OST-2005- 23344, -23345]. -ARS

By Adrian Schofield
The Airbus A380 flight program reached its 1,000th flight hour last week, and Airbus is nearly halfway through the planned flight test hours for the A380. So far, four A380 development aircraft have flown since the first flight on April 27, 2005. Eventually, five aircraft will complete about 2,500 flight hours before the first delivery.

David Hughes
FAA is beginning to tip its hand on its plans to roll out Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) nationwide, with a recent briefing revealing that the agency wants to introduce ADS-B position reporting in the 2007-2010 timeframe.

Steven Lott
US Airways CEO Doug Parker last week decided to forego a $770,000 bonus for his 2005 performance, as he didn't feel comfortable defending the payment to employees who have taken large pay cuts and many others who are still furloughed.

Steven Lott
Aerolineas Argentinas pilots and flight engineers ended their 24-hour strike (DAILY, March 10) last Friday as scheduled, saying they were ready to go back to work and that they expected operations would be normalized by Saturday evening.