Aviation Daily

Staff
General aviation interests have once again convinced Congress that "order-to-land" legislation poses safety risks to aircraft. The provision, in the Senate Coast Guard reauthorization bill, was deleted before Congress adjourned for the year. The House had dropped the provision earlier.

Staff
Vilnius, Lithuania-based Lithuanian Airlines has ordered two Saab 2000 turboprops, to be delivered this month and next and to enter service during the winter season, Saab Aircraft Leasing said. Lithuanian Airlines, formed after Lithuania gained its independence in 1991, gradually has disposed of its fleet of Russian aircraft types.

Staff
AlliedSignal said yesterday at the National Business Aviation Association meeting in Las Vegas that it will integrate its Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System (EGPWS) with its new Global Star 2100 Flight Management System (FMS), "giving pilots the ability to view moving terrain on an FMS." The new FMS, also announced yesterday, is a plug-in replacement navigation computer that combines a multi-channel Global Positioning System receiver, global navigation database and a multi-function control and display.

Staff
Atlas Air said it signed a contract to provide 747-400 airfreight services for Cargolux Airlines, its second such contract with the carrier. Atlas is the top pick of Merrill Lynch in a recent report on the airfreight industry, saying it "continues to outperform expectations."

Staff
Tower Air has purchased a 747-200 it was leasing from CIT Group. CIT helped finance the transaction.

Staff
Board of Supervisors in Santa Ana, Calif., yesterday received a proposal to hold flight demonstrations with a variety of aircraft expected to use the future airport at El Toro, formerly a Marine Corps air base.

Staff
America West Holdings' wholly owned subsidiary, The Leisure Company, will acquire The Vacation Store, a national leisure travel retail distributor based in Virginia Beach, Va. The Leisure Company President and Chief Executive John Garel said the acquisition supports the company's strategy of expanding its product lines and retail capabilities.

Staff
Europe must decide soon whether it will create its own proprietary global navigation satellite system (GNSS) or accept the economic and strategic disadvantages of continued dependence on the U.S. Global Positioning System (GPS), said Neil Kinnock, European transport commissioner. Policymakers also must be prepared to spend "substantial" amounts of public funding if Europe is to have its own system, he warned.

Staff
TWA yesterday announced the acquisition of four 757s from Boeing to be delivered next year. Also in 1999, it will take one 767-300ER from International Lease Finance Corp. The deliveries will give TWA 27 757s and five 767-300ERs. TWA plans to retire its remaining 727-200s when it gets the 757s to help it meet the Stage 3 deadline of January 2000. Chairman Gerald Gitner said that "by the end of the decade, TWA will have replaced more than 40% of its fleet within 3 l/2 years. The carrier recently acquired three 757s from ILFC and 24 MD-83s from Boeing.

Staff
AMR Services said it received a contract from Ethiopian Airlines to provide ground-handling at Newark Airport.

Staff
Northwest's pilots strike gave a boost to United's profits, helping the Chicago-based airline post a record third quarter net of $516 million on a fully distributed basis, up 3%. The strike added $75 million in revenue to United's coffers or $35-40 million on an after-tax basis. United's profits are understated, since last year's third quarter showed a $235 million after-tax gain from the sale of Apollo Travel Services/Galileo International. As with seven other U.S.

Staff
U.S. Industry Traffic Market Share (000) September 1998 RPMs Share (%) 1. United 11,167,566 22.86 2. American 8,833,576 18.08 3. Delta 8,830,458 18.07 4. Continental 4,566,816 9.35 5. US Airways 3,343,190 6.84 6. Southwest 2,519,063 5.16

Staff
DOT yesterday reaffirmed its allocation of 14 base-level U.S.-France frequencies to TWA and eight to Tower. DOT withdrew four additional weekly frequencies from Tower as the carrier does not plan to use them "for 15 of the 17 months in question." The department allocated 17 available frequencies and the four withdrawn from Tower - seven each to American, from Los Angeles, United, Chicago, and US Airways, Philadelphia, effective immediately until a final decision is made in Docket OST-98-4614 for the 1999 U.S.-France combination frequency proceeding.

Staff
AirTran's board may try to oust Chief Executive Joseph Corr at next week's board meeting, sources say. Shareholders are upset that the company spent $3 million to prepare for a possible job action by flight attendants disgruntled with the slow pace of contract talks. Flight attendants ratified a tentative deal Monday (DAILY, Oct. 21), but the board is angry that negotiations took nearly three years.

Staff
St. George, Utah-based SkyWest reported a 71.2% rise in net income to $12.8 million and a 41.3% gain in operating revenues to $113.5 million for the third quarter 1998. Operating expenses increased 38.1% to $94 million and operating income grew 59% to $19.5 million. SkyWest provides more than 900 daily departures to cities in 13 western states and Canada in partnership with Delta at Los Angeles and Salt Lake City, and with United to other West Coast points.

Staff
US Airways Group yesterday reported a third quarter net profit of $141.9 million, down 19.6% from the third quarter of 1997. The sharply lower figure was caused by a 40.3% rate of taxation, up sharply from 19.3% in 1997. Discounting this, operating profits were a record $270.2 million, revenue increased 4.4% to $2.2 billion, and expenses fell 4.6% to $1.9 billion. Despite lower fuel costs, the airline's overall cost per available seat mile remained steady at 12.27 cents, while revenue per ASM grew 4.7% to 13.75 cents.

Staff
Decrane Aircraft Holdings, producer of avionics components, said it will acquire MSA Aircraft Interior Products. Both serve the high-end corporate jet market.

Staff
The omnibus spending bill, H.R. 4328, was passed by the House late Tuesday and the Senate yesterday, with some lawmakers complaining that so many last-minute deals were made it was impossible to know what they were voting for. The bill does reauthorize the Airport Improvement Program for six months, however, releasing millions in AIP grants once President Clinton signs it, probably today. It also sets FAA's fiscal 1999 budget at or near $9.563 billion. The bill passed 333-95 in the House and 65-29 in the Senate, where six senators did not vote.

Staff
U.S. Industry Traffic Market Share (000) 9 Months 1998 RPMs Share (%) 1. United 93,820,666 19.79 2. American 82,402,881 17.38 3. Delta 78,553,359 16.57 4. Northwest 50,250,169 10.60 5. Continental 40,696,368 8.59 6. US Airways 31,262,741 6.60

Staff
Boeing plans to invest 70 million Dutch guilders (US$35.7 million) to build a new European customer service and parts distribution center at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport. The site, which also will be used for logistics training and technical support, replaces the company's former Brussels Airport support center, which burned down last year.

Staff
Triumph Group reported net sales for the September quarter grew 32% to $99.5 million and operating income rose 40% to $8 million. For the first six months, net sales rose 30% to $190.6 million and operating income 53% to $15.6 million.

Staff
TWA yesterday reported a $5.3 million third quarter loss as it tried and failed to boost third quarter traffic. In the third quarter of 1997, it turned a profit of $6.3 million. The airline posted operating income of $23.7 million, considerably lower than the $63.8 million a year ago. "There can be no denying our disappointment in these results," said Chairman Gerald Gitner, in a conference call with reporters. A third quarter net loss is "not acceptable," he said.

Staff
Duane Woerth, a pilot for Northwest, was elected yesterday as president of the Air Line Pilots Association at ALPA's regular board meeting. Woerth served eight years as first VP and was ALPA's director for the International Federation of Air Line Pilots Association. Dennis Dolan of Delta was elected first VP and John Feldvary of US Airways VP-finance treasurer. Jerome Mugerditchian of United was re-elected to a third term as VP-administration/secretary.

Staff
Dulles, Va.-based Atlantic Coast Airlines, which flies as United Express, reported a 119% jump in net income to $20.6 million for the third quarter 1998. ACA President and Chief Executive Kerry Skeen attributed the growth to "substantial improvements" in on-time statistics and dispatch reliability despite the challenges inherent in the carrier's rapid growth and sharp rise in passenger traffic. Operating margin for the third quarter, on a year-over-year basis, grew to 21.8% from 16.5% last year, and cost per available seat mile declined 17.2% to 20.2 cents.

Staff
Dragonair took delivery of another A320, which joins four others - three leased and one purchased - delivered this year under its fleet renewal program.