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AirTran's Next City

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This contest is a direct allegory to the temperature control knob on the FA panel on the Dash-8. Controls nothing, but makes the participant believe that they are part of the process.

Nothing to see here, move along.
 
I flew them and wow!! What a disappointment!! 3 1/2 late going and 3 hrs late on my out bound. How do they stay in business??? Beats me? I dont see them around for the long haul!!!

We complete our flights (sometimes late), but in the same situation, Delta cancels their flights in order to maintain "system integrity".

On time arrivals and departures are a high focus item for Air Tran (especially in Atlanta, but sometimes things like weather and flow control get in the way).

Why were you late? I'm assuming you were told something, but since you're a pilot, you probably knew what the deal was anyway, right? So what happened?
 
I flew them and wow!! What a disappointment!! 3 1/2 late going and 3 hrs late on my out bound. How do they stay in business??? Beats me? I dont see them around for the long haul!!!

Were in negotiations, what did you expect?
 
Virtually no cancelled flights = Late flights

99% or better completion factor... Big Boys cancel.... Hard working AirTran cannot get away with that tactic...

Sorry for the delay... Welcome to ATC and bad weather days in ATL...
Sincere apologies..it is a bummer on some days... Concourse A and B have the same problems..
 
Air Tran Will Be Cautious

Pending resolution of the US - DAL proposal it would be a safe bet that AAI will be taking a wait and see altitude. If the proposed merger makes it there will be lots of shuffling to go around in the southeast and Atlantic seaboard.
 
I gave Bob Fornaro a ride to work on Monday and he said that Phoenix and Charleston were leading the votes.
 
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Pending resolution of the US - DAL proposal it would be a safe bet that AAI will be taking a wait and see altitude. If the proposed merger makes it there will be lots of shuffling to go around in the southeast and Atlantic seaboard.


Unlikely it will happen due to too much route overlap, and loss of service to small communities that even Airtran wouldn't touch. Unlikely.

Bye Bye--General Lee
 
FDJ2 posted this on the Majors forum

Why Mergers get Axed by the Feds
Oberstar, Slaughter to Release GAO Study United-US Airways Merger
Analysis shows merger would reduce competition in 290 markets and spur further airline consolidation.

WASHINGTON—The proposed merger between United Airlines and US Airways will reduce airline choices for millions of air travelers and is likely to push other carriers to consolidate in order to compete with the merged airline, a new study by the General Accounting Office shows.


Rep. James L. Oberstar (D-Minn.) and Rep. Louise M. Slaughter (D-N.Y.) are to release the GAO report, "Aviation Competition: Issues Related to the Proposed United Airlines-US Airways Merger"(GAO-01-212), today at a Capitol Hill news conference. Oberstar is the Ranking Democratic Member of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. Slaughter, represents Rochester, N.Y., a market that already has some of the highest airfares in the country. Rochester stands to be heavily affected by the merger.

“I have been deeply concerned about the anti-competitive effects of the proposed merger of United Airlines and US Airways, and the accompanying proposed transfer of slots to a new airline, DC Air,” Oberstar said. “I believe that, if the proposed merger were to be approved, the remaining large airlines would feel compelled to merge to retain their shares of the overall market. We would soon be reduced to an industry of three major competitors, resulting in a devastating loss of competition for consumers.”

“This report underscores what I have said all along–that this proposed merger would be the beginning of the end of the aviation industry as we know it,” said Congresswoman Slaughter. “If the merger goes forward, other mergers would follow. Communities would be at the mercy of three carriers, dominating the entire United States. Deregulation was never intended to facilitate the creation of de facto monopolies controlling which communities live or die depending on their access to air service.”

Among the study’s findings:

· After a merger, the New United would dominate 1,156 of the 5,000 most heavily traveled markets, affecting 61.1 million passengers. New United’s market dominance would be 36 percent larger than that of the next carrier, Delta Airlines.
· The merged airline would carry 33 percent more passengers than Delta; 89 percent more than American; and 89 percent more than Southwest, and New United would carry nearly the same number of passengers as Northwest, Continental, TWA and America West combined.
· Based on interviews with industry analysts and officials from several airlines, GAO concluded that if the merger were approved, the “new United would so alter the existing balance in the domestic market that, for the other major U.S. airlines to compete successfully, they would have little choice but to consolidate as well.”
· The merger of United and US Airways would reduce or eliminate competition for almost 16 million passengers in 290 of the most heavily traveled aviation markets. In 43 of those 290 markets, the merger would reduce the number of competitors from 2 to 1, affecting 4.1 million passengers.
· GAO compared the proposed United-US Airways merger to the proposed alliance and stock acquisition between Northwest and Continental, which DOJ found to violate anti-trust laws. GAO’s findings indicate that the loss of competition from a United-US Airways merger would be much greater than from a Northwest-Continental relationship.

“Fewer choices, higher fares and a deterioration in service is not what Congress contemplated in 1978 when it deregulated the airline industry. Yet, that is the likely result if a United-US Airways merger is approved by the Department of Justice,” Oberstar said. “I strongly urge the DOJ to take heed of the GAO’s analysis of the merger’s impact on competition and consumers, and reject this proposed merger.”



James Oberstar will become Chairman of the Transportation Sub Committee when the new Congress starts early next year. He doesn't like mergers, obviously. He called the proposed merger "nonsense" on CNBC on Nov 15th, the day USAir announced their intentions.


Bye Bye--General Lee
 

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