Delta will begin hourly nonstop Atlanta-Philadelphia service on April 4. It will also add frequencies to its scheduled Atlanta-Austin, Greensboro/High Point/Winston-Salem and Norfolk service.
Lucio Tan, Philippine Airlines (PAL) major shareholder, is determined to keep the flag carrier flying with or without foreign investors. Speaking through PAL VP-Administration and Services Manolo Aquino yesterday in Manila, Tan told The DAILY he is prepared to fork out more than the proposed US$150 million required for the airline to continue operations. Tan is confident the increased funding will enable PAL to stand on its own after negotiations with potential investors Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific and Northwest fell through.
Sen. Max Cleland (D-Ga.) has been named to fill the lone Democratic vacancy on the Senate Commerce Committee's aviation subcommittee, congressional sources said. Cleland, who was elected in 1996 to the Senate seat of retiring Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.), fills the aviation subcommittee vacancy created by the retirement last year of Sen. Wendell Ford (D-Ky.). The full Commerce Committee will begin consideration of Chairman John McCain's (R-Ariz.) FAA reauthorization bill today.
United has installed two new 747-400 simulators at its Denver flight center, reaching a total of five 747-400 simulators at the facility. The new simulators from CAE are certified to Level D with Pratt&Whitney, General Electric and Rolls-Royce engines.
Northwest yesterday showed that the 15-day pilots strike in the third quarter scared away travelers throughout the fourth quarter and cost it $300 million in expenses and lost revenue. In the latest setback, the airline lost $181 million for the December quarter and $286 million for the year. The Asia division lost money in 1998, leading the airline to expect flat Asia results this year. Northwest's calamity could not be more visible yesterday next to Delta's record $1.1 billion net profit last year. (See story on Page 101.)
First flight of the prototype Sikorsky S-92A Helibus medium-lift helicopter, powered by two General Electric CT7 engines, was completed last week at the Sikorsky Development Flight Center in West Palm Beach, Fla. The Helibus is expected to serve a range of needs, from passenger, cargo and aeromedical service to search and rescue operations.
DOT Secretary Rodney Slater and FAA Administrator Jane Garvey today will dedicate the first Display System Replacement at the Seattle air route traffic control center. DSRs will replace decades-old equipment with modern computer processing technology at 20 en route centers, including new controller workstations, display computer hardware and software.
U.S. Airports Sources of Airline Generated Operating Revenue Small Hub Airports* Fiscal Year 1997 Dollar Amounts in Thousands Terminal Terminal Apron, Cargo Area Revenue Per Landing and Hangar Rental Passenger Fees Space Rental Akron/Canton 549 2.44 425 263
All Nippon Airways retained its status in 1998 as the largest airline in Asia in terms of passengers carried, and the largest outside the U.S. ANA, which transported more than 40 million passengers last year, carries nearly 50% of Japan's domestic traffic.
Spirit Airlines posted a 106.6% jump in traffic on 132.5% more capacity for December 1998 compared with December 1997, which depressed the load factor 8.7 percentage points to 69.5%. Spirit flew 140.4 million revenue passenger miles and 202 million available seat miles. Passengers carried shot up 81.8% to 149,905. Year-to-date RPMs gained 82.1% and ASMs 86.2%, driving the load factor down 2.2 points. Passengers carried rose 79.1%.
Vanguard said it has leased two Stage 3 737-200 aircraft from GE Capital Aviation. The aircraft will be delivered early this year and will be among the youngest in Vanguard's fleet. The low-fare carrier, which began service in December 1994 from Kansas City, Mo., currently has a fleet of nine 737-200s.
House Transportation and Senate Commerce committees are poised for fast starts on their aviation agenda this year. Transportation already has approved a six-month FAA reauthorization and last week bolstered the staff of the aviation subcommittee for the battle over taking the aviation trust fund off budget, adding three staffers.
Northwest and Continental said DOT should dismiss a request by American and Delta to reconsider DOT's decision to keep its hands off Continental's international route authority temporarily. DOT, at the behest of Northwest and Continental, agreed to postpone for one year a ruling on whether the two carriers' code-share deal and stock purchase involves a transfer of international route authority. American and Delta filed a joint petition asking DOT to revisit the matter.
Hawaiian Airlines is introducing first-class seating on its interisland flights. The new service will allow customers seamless first-class service on all flights and boost the carrier's revenue opportunities, said Senior VP-marketing and Sales John Happ. "The addition of first class on interisland flights allows us to better penetrate high-yield transpacific markets not only with our own mainland-Hawaii flights but those of other carriers as well." Hipp also said the new service will add value to the HawaiianMiles frequent flyer program.
This year will feature weak economic conditions, more intense competition, a large capacity increase and lower profits for U.S. airlines, according to Merrill Lynch. The company expects industry profits to decline 12% in 1999. This is largely due to a 5% increase in capacity, "which we think will pressure revenues," said analysts Candace Browning and Michael Linenberg. Although several airlines adjusted downward their capacity increases for 1999, one carrier's action troubled the analysts. US Airways plans to grow 8% in 1999.
B/E Aerospace said it was selected by Legend Airlines to provide business-class seats for six DC-9 aircraft. Jersey European Airways also contracted for seating for 20 BAe-146 aircraft.
Minneapolis-based Sun Country Airlines announced Friday that it will shift gears and become a scheduled carrier effective June 1, a move that will hit crosstown rival Northwest when it is at its weakest. The 16-year-old airline operates four DC-10-15s and 11 727s in charter service, mostly to beach destinations. The Minneapolis area suffered last year as Northwest went on strike and there were few alternatives for many local passengers. Sun Country Chief Executive Bill La Macchia Jr.
With its strike behind it and a contract in place, Northwest's Air Line Pilots Association unit is getting ready to elect a new negotiating committee at the February Master Executive Council meeting. The committee needs a new chairman and two members. The union also is looking for members for its newly created alliance committee, which will focus on scope and compliance issues.
Aerospace Industries Association elected James Wilson, chairman and chief executive of Cordant Technologies, chairman of the board of governors; Daniel Burnham, president and chief executive of Raytheon Co., vice-chairman and William Ballhaus, VP-science and engineering of Lockheed Martin Corp., chairman of the AIA Technical Operations Council.
United's Air Line Pilots Association Master Executive Council, meeting this week in Honolulu, is writing to its rank and file on hot-button issues of 1998 - including industry consolidation, globalization, the midterm wage adjustment and ESOP perpetuation - and on what's coming in 1999. The meeting is expected to last all week.
Delta appointed Mauricio Cespedes Morales sales manager and Miguel Lopez Abarca sales representative in San Jose, Costa Rica, and named Maria Villagran, Lissette Cifuentes, Wendy Vindas and Christopher Haase to the sales force in Guatemala City.