I should have been clearer, sideshow
I know that it was UA who wanted the current fee-per-departure agreements. The reasons were about control as you said, primarily because Comair gave Delta a bit of scare IMO. UA has largely resisted the idea of owning its regionals outside of the Air Wisconsin debacle, so these 10 year deals were negotiated instead. Better deal for UA anyway, because by the time UA would have been interested in buying its regionals, their asking price would have been too high to make it worthwhile. The extortion I was referring to was the yearly renegotiation of the subsidy rates for each UAX carrier. There is alot of information to suggest that ACA management played serious hardball with UA and won hefty increases from UA when the carrier was in trouble. Skywest wasn't as aggressive, but still won increases from what I understand, an Air Wis stayed at last years rates. Perhaps ACA didn't think it would come to this, and felt that playing hardball on the rates would pay off as UA outsourced more in it's restructuring-who knows? What is known is that something has to change with these current deals. There are projections out there that have UAX flying 41% of UA domestic flying, up from the mid twenties right now. UAX's connectivity would increase dramatically, which under the current deals means revenue would decrease almost as dramatically. Remember that UA only makes money if a UAX passenger gets on UA metal-UAX, Star(excluding LH), and UsAirways don't count. Outside of that they are largely throwing money out the window in an effort to maintain market presence. It's great for ACA, Skywest, and Air Wis that they are recieving this money and making profits, but how can this be expected to continue in this fashion long term? UsAirways' CEO Dave Siegel is learning this as well, the RJ's aren't working as well profit wise when they aren't in house like CoEx was. I think the operational control issues aren't as big as UA management thought they were. Where are ACA, Air Wis, and Skywest going to take the majority of their aircraft if they don't like the deal given to them by UA? Nowhere because there aren't enough big time dance partners left, and certainly not ones offering the same profit potential as their current partners. Look at Mesa and Chautaqua. Both have faced challenges with their major partners over the last four years or so, and have looked to expand their portfolios. The results haven't a ton, Mesa was able to add Frontier and Chautaqua was able to add some DL feed. However there main breadwinners pretty much remain unchanged. Why else is JO so hot to get back in bed with a company he once sued(UA) and so pissed at Air Wis for getting the AirTran JetConnect deal. There's only so many crumbs to go around. The solution for UA coming out of BK has to be finding a way to make money on many of these routes with their own metal combined with a more rationalized approach to UAX that keeps those companies stable but forces them to are in the risk of flying airplanes for profit.