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ASA in the news again!

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Medeco

SQUIB
Joined
Sep 12, 2002
Posts
1,064
It was interesting to see the spin the company put on this both in the article and the company website.

Walt is the best ramper we have at ASA, if he loses his job after being talked into this, ASA will really lose one that works his tail off day after day. And we will all know that it was never his fault ASA could not fix things. I hope they listen to him and give him what he needs.

Medeco

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November 12, 2006

Frustration Grows at Carousel as More Baggage Goes Astray

By JEFF BAILEY
ATLANTA, Nov. 6 — Since Aug. 10, when a ban on most carry-on liquids sent the amount of checked luggage soaring, airlines have been misplacing many more bags, and the fumbling could well escalate during the busy holiday travel season.
The Transportation Department reported that 107,731 more fliers had their bags go missing in August than they did a year earlier, a 33 percent increase. It got worse in September, with 183,234 more passengers suffering mishandled bags than a year earlier, up 92 percent.
Globally, about 30 million bags are mishandled each year, according to SITA, a company that sells software to airlines and airports for baggage and other systems. Airlines spend about $2.5 billion to find those bags and deliver them to waiting, often angry, passengers.
All but about 200,000 bags are eventually reunited with their owners each year — a number that sounds pretty high on its own, but that represents less than 1 percent of the billions of bags that are checked annually.
Efforts are under way to fix two of the worst baggage operations in the United States — at US Airways in Philadelphia and at Atlantic Southeast Airlines, which operates as Delta Connection here. Both airlines had scrimped on workers and equipment at these airports. But it is far from certain whether these hubs will be running smoothly by Thanksgiving.
Because of the relatively primitive technology used by airlines to track baggage, passengers typically only learn that their luggage missed their flight after a futile wait at the carousel. Then, travelers must hunt down baggage agents, fill out forms, and wait for hours or even days for someone, often unannounced, to deliver their bags.
Rhoda Frank of Chicago took her 12-year-old granddaughter, Bronwyn, to Manitoba last month for a vacation in which they hoped to see polar bears. Bronwyn flew on United Airlines from Raleigh, N.C., to meet her grandmother in Chicago, but her bag stayed behind.
The flight to Manitoba was not until the next morning, and United told Mrs. Frank the bag would be delivered by midnight. “It didn’t come,” she said. They flew north anyway, without Bronwyn’s long underwear or down jacket. The bag finally arrived, just before it was time to come home. In the meantime, “I scrounged for clothing,” Mrs. Frank said.
Airlines were generally misplacing slightly fewer bags this year until Aug. 10, when authorities in London foiled a plot to blow up airliners using liquid explosives mixed onboard. The liquids ban led to a roughly 25 percent increase in checked bags, which stressed some baggage operations.
Many of the bag-handling problems are because of the industry’s cost-cutting.
US Airways, twice in bankruptcy since Sept. 11, 2001, and then merged a year ago with America West Airlines, had a baggage meltdown at its Philadelphia hub around Christmas of 2004. Executives said they had known they needed to add people and equipment there. Some of that occurred. And through July of this year, fewer bags were going missing.
But with the surge of checked bags in August, the hub’s bag-handling performance began “backsliding,” said J. Scott Kirby, president of the airline. “A lot of balls in the air with the merger,” he said. “This one didn’t get done as well as it should have.”
Crews at Philadelphia, for instance, were short of equipment and fighting over the tractors — known as tugs — that they use to pull baggage carts.
“There’s a real lack of organization on the ramp in Philadelphia,” he added, where three-to-four times as many bags are misplaced as at other US Airways hubs.
US Airways is hiring 190 additional workers and 60 managers to fix the bag mess. The company is also buying more tractors, but is still about 40 short of its needs.
“We’re not going to fix the thing overnight,” Mr. Kirby said.
Regional carriers have been the fastest-growing part of the airline business in recent years, as they started flying some of the short routes abandoned by big carriers like Delta Air Lines. For example, Atlantic Southeast — which Delta sold last year to SkyWest, but which still operates as Delta Connection — carried twice as many passengers in 2005, 12 million, as in 2000.
When it was owned by Delta, which is operating under bankruptcy court protection, Southeast was denied the tractors, carts, computers and people it needed to keep up with its baggage — in Atlanta 30,000 pieces a day now. “When Delta sold us Atlantic Southeast, part of the reason was for us to fix some things,” said Jerry C. Atkin, SkyWest’s chief executive.
But over the last year, Atlantic Southeast has showed only modest improvement, remaining the worst bag handler in the Transportation Department’s rankings. And then in August its performance deteriorated again. Delta began complaining directly to Mr. Atkin, who installed new managers and agreed to hire 300 more ground workers and double Atlantic Southeast’s fleet of carts to carry baggage, among other equipment purchases.
“I got tired of being embarrassed by the numbers,” Mr. Atkin said. Now, he added, “there are some good people who have put their jobs on the line to fix things.”
One of them is Walt Kaurin, the new baggage performance manager, whose leathery skin shows his 24 years working outside on the ramp for Atlantic Southeast. Told of Mr. Atkin’s remark, Mr. Kaurin grimaced, explained his initial reluctance to become a manager, then, adopting a smile, said, “I was pretty confident we could fix it.”
It will take time. October mishandled bag numbers, not yet released by the Transportation Department, will again be poor for Atlantic Southeast, said Joe Kolshak, an executive vice president at Delta, whose own bag performance is highly dependent on the regional carrier.
Getting those 300 new hires up to speed will not be easy. “They’re minimum wage in many cases,” Mr. Kolshak said. “And there’s high turnover.”
Financial problems have slowed industry investment in technology that could improve bag handling. Radio frequency identification tags, in wide use among retailers to track inventory, would allow airlines to easily know if a bag did not make a flight. Then, the passenger could be warned via text messaging not to waste time at the carousel, and to call to arrange a delivery.
Not waiting for airlines, McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas is installing radio frequency readers and tagging all outgoing luggage. The tags cost about 20 cents each, but are worth it to a city that relies so heavily on tourists.
“If they have a bad travel experience, they’ll look at each other and say, ‘Wow, we don’t want to do that again,’ ” said Samuel Ingalls, assistant director of aviation.
Meanwhile, airlines can hope more travelers adopt the Zen thinking of Pamela Ingram, a Binghamton, N.Y., consultant who travels five days a week. She checks her bags, fearlessly. In the rare instances — once this year — of a tardy bag, she happily makes do.
“I got to go to my meeting in jeans,” Ms. Ingram said. “You can’t travel this much and expect everything to go right.”
 
Here we go again. If they want to fix the ramp, they need to pay the ramp people better. You get what you pay for. The minimum wage comment from Kolshak says it all.

Walt's a great guy. I asked him once why he hadn't taken a management job, and he just laughed and said "It's not worth the trouble". He's right. I hope this works out for him.
 
:rolleyes:Once again mgmnt shifting the blame to anyone BUT themselves! What a bunch of clueless D!CKS!! JA, you need to FIRE ALL of them or this company is going to burn itself up! The employee's don't trust the mgmnt and no matter WHAT you say, without getting rid of the problem, you are with them all the way!! Morale is at it's lowest and only getting lower!
 
Another article in the Sunday (11/12/06, I got the early edition) about ASA's dismal .performance. Although I don't always agree with consultant Mike Boyd, he says in this article that Skywest needs to clean out the GO and get rid of the ASA management. This I CAN agree with!!!
 
From the Atlanta Journal Constitution..
http://www.ajc.com/business/content/business/delta/stories/2006/11/11/1112sbizasa.html

Delta partner ranked last in timeliness

By RUSSELL GRANTHAM
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 11/12/06
If you traveled on Delta Connection carrier Atlantic Southeast Airlines this summer, you had almost a 50-50 chance of being late — the highest delay rate in the industry. On top of that, you also faced the highest odds of having your baggage lost.
Known as ASA, the regional airline has long grappled with service issues. But lately it's achieved a rare ignominy: Out of 20 airlines tracked in a government report, ASA ranked 20th in both on-time performance and baggage handling in each of the last four monthly reports.

tickets sold by Delta and in planes painted with Delta colors — so Delta naturally gets the blame if they have problems.
More Delta customers also find themselves on ASA, whose 358 daily flights out of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport account for about one in six Delta passengers. That number has grown rapidly as the bigger carrier shifted more domestic flying to regional partners as part of its Chapter 11 restructuring.
"Am I happy with it? No, not at all," said Joe Kolshak, Delta's executive vice president of operations. "These aren't ASA customers. They are Delta customers. We sell Delta tickets."
It has been so bad, Kolshak said, that ASA has missed out on millions of dollars in performance incentives under its contract with Delta. Kolshak keeps a digital camera handy to document problems he can forward to ASA's managers.
The man getting many of those pictures is Anthony DiNota, who two months ago was put in charge of fixing ASA's service shortcomings as head of its Atlanta airport operations.
He makes no excuses.
"Every criticism we get, we deserve," DiNota said. The Atlanta hub is where most of the problems originate, he added. "It's our golden goose. We better figure out how to make her purr."
He said the 5,700-employee company is hiring 300 extra employees, spending $5 million on extra equipment and facilities and overhauling procedures to improve its baggage and on-time performance.
Jobs affected
Improvement can't come soon enough for some customers.
Michael McCullough, a public relations account executive, said an ASA flight he took this summer from Atlanta to Key West, Fla., was significantly delayed because of overbooking.
"Everyone was on vacation and no one wanted to take the miles or whatever," he said, referring to an ASA offer of Delta SkyMiles to get passengers to give up seats. "We sat there for 45 minutes. It was crazy." Finally, he said, ASA involuntarily bumped the last passengers who had checked in, and the flight departed.
Russ McGonagil, an independent TV technician who runs instant replays for college football games and other sports programs, is more forgiving. Or maybe just more jaded.
Late flights and glitches are just "part of flying," said McGonagil, who has flown out of Atlanta most weekends for more than two decades.
"They've loaded up all of the planes. The system is filled up to the max so that all it takes is a little sprinkle ... to clog up the system," he said. "It doesn't bother me that much any more."
Many smaller cities rely on ASA for a link to Delta's Atlanta hub, and businesspeople in some have long complained about ASA.
"It affects my ability to do my job," said Ellen McNair, vice president of corporate development for the Montgomery Area Chamber of Commerce. She said people flying in to consider locating a business or convention in Montgomery were upset by bad ASA flights.
"It reflects on Montgomery," she said. "If you can't get here, or you're delayed or your bag is lost ... good luck getting that convention."
She said the community has sent letters, pleaded with local managers and dispatched emissaries to Atlanta to meet Delta and ASA executives. "This has been a very big epic for us over the last seven or eight years," she said. "There's just no excuse for the service that they provide."
The city hired industry consultant Michael Boyd to help.
"Jobs and economic growth are being threatened, and all we hear from ASA is 'We're working on it.' " Boyd said. He believes SkyWest, which now owns ASA, will improve service, but that it may mean replacing ASA's "sloppy and unconcerned" management.
"SkyWest is going to do it, but it's going to take more than just buying equipment," he said. "They need to hose out that whole ASA headquarters."
Higher bumping figures
ASA was launched in 1979 and grew into an independent — and highly profitable — contract carrier for Delta. Delta bought out ASA in 1999, citing as one reason a need to improve its service.
In September 2005, just a week before filing for Chapter 11 protection, Delta sold its ASA subsidiary to Utah-based SkyWest and returned to a contract arrangement with the carrier.
Until 2003 it was hard to gauge ASA's service because it wasn't included in the U.S. Department of Transportation's monthly Air Travel Consumer Report. The report lists rates for on-time arrivals and lost luggage, ranking service through hard data rather than the more common — and less reliable — yardsticks of anecdote or reputation. ASA was added to the report when the DOT altered it to include more carriers.
The spotlight has been harsh. ASA is usually last in baggage handling — rated by mishandled bag reports per 1,000 passengers — and in the bottom half for on-time arrivals.
Lately, it's been worse than that.
ASA was last in both categories in June, July, August and September. Its on-time rates were below 60 percent — a number not often seen in the DOT reports — in the latter three of those months. It also had 61 of the 135 flights on the September report's list of flights that were late more than 80 percent of the time. One offender, its 6:30 p.m. flight to Atlanta from Akron, Ohio, was late 95 percent of the time, and by an average of 82 minutes.
ASA's lost luggage rate peaked at 24.13 per 1,000 customers in September — nearly three times the industry average of 8.25.
One apparent mitigating factor was a runway repaving at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, which started in September and sent Delta's and AirTran Airways' on-time numbers tumbling for that month as well.
According to DOT numbers, ASA cancels a much higher percentage of flights and bumps passengers four times more often than most carriers. On the other hand, it usually ranks in the middle on consumer complaints filed with the DOT. Other regional carriers, such as American Eagle, also tend to do poorly in the report, though none as chronically as ASA.
SkyWest investing
DiNota says ASA is focusing on baggage handling issues first, because problems there have been so chronic and affect other aspects of the operation. "Bags, unfortunately, are just a side effect of a lot of things," he said.
DiNota believes many of ASA's problems stem from bottlenecks fueled by too little investment and short-staffing. The airline is also working with Delta on scheduling to boost on-time rates and help smooth luggage handling.
DiNota thinks Delta understood how to fix ASA's shortcomings but was thwarted by a lack of funding as it struggled with its own financial problems, which started only a few months after the '99 buyout. The last six years were a "tough period for capital investment," he said.
SkyWest apparently isn't under the same constraints; its profits have soared almost 60 percent to $183 million during the five quarters that it has owned ASA. The company's SkyWest regional carrier, which operates as a Delta Connection carrier in the Far West, usually does well in the DOT service reports.
ASA plans to spend about $5 million over the next several months on more than 100 baggage carts, 40 airport tugs, portable computers, baggage loading ramps, passenger boarding ramps and other equipment, DiNota said.
ASA also is hiring about 300 employees to beef up operations in baggage handling and at each gate, and to speed up aircraft "turns" — the amount of time it takes to unload, clean, refuel and load jets.
Delta calls shots
Rick Bernskoetter, spokesman for the pilots' union at ASA, believes a combination of short-staffing, high turnover and cramped and poorly designed gate areas in Atlanta cause most delays.
"Our on-time performance doesn't fall apart in the air. It falls apart on the ground," Bernskoetter said. He has had to park his plane for more than an hour waiting for a gate, he said.
Kolshak agreed crew shortages are a big reason why ASA hasn't kept up with its flight schedules. Delta typically gives ASA's regional jets 45 minutes at the gate to get ready for the next flight.
"If you only have one crew for three planes, you only have a third of that ... time. That is the problem," Kolshak said.
DiNota said ASA has raised ramp employees' pay and expects ramp operations to be fully staffed by December.
ASA will still be somewhat at Delta's mercy. The bigger carrier decides how many flights ASA should handle, how much time it has and whose flights will be cancelled when bad weather threatens. ASA's rate of flight cancellations this summer — among the highest in the industry — was about 60 percent higher than Delta's.
Kolshak acknowledged Delta sometimes grounds contract carriers' smaller jets first when air traffic clogs up. "We have to triage," he said. DiNota said one good move came when Delta agreed to use its own ramp staff in Atlanta to take care of other regional carriers' jets, freeing up about 150 ASA employees. He hopes travelers will see obvious improvements before next summer.
"We're very focused," he said. "We're shooting for next summer, although we are already seeing nice incremental improvements."
 
“They’re minimum wage in many cases,” Mr. Kolshak said. “And there’s high turnover.”
quote]

Hmmmm, how can we fix the baggage handling problem? Hmmmmmm.

It's ironic Kolshak would say that.

I say Delta shouldn't complain about ASA's quality. According to Lyin' LeBrecque, ASA is required to be second from the bottom in cost by year 5, according to the DCI agreement.

Delta, welcome to the race to the bottom. YOU GET WHAT YOU PAY FOR!!!
 
"SkyWest is going to do it, but it's going to take more than just buying equipment," he said. "They need to hose out that whole ASA headquarters."


And there, ladies and gentlemen, lies the crux of the matter. Fire the whole fcuken lot of the useless b@stards.
 
Lets see how long it takes them to print the entire name of the city on the baggage tags.......With lowball pay and a super high turnover, by the time a single ramper learns all the codes he's reciting them as he's walking out the door. I'll bet you the average ramper knows 3/4 of the airport city codes.....

MDT- Sounds like Midway to me........
ABE- Yup, going to Abaleine, Tx.........
ALB- Oh, this one's going to Albany, GEORGIA.....
ATW- Hmm, Allentown...........
"Ahh, I'm getting tired and a little blown out with this whole baggage thing- it's time for a nap under the C-32 stairwell"..........WASSUP BRO!
 

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