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Deregulation push?

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fly4surf

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2004
Posts
306
RE-regulation push?

Airline deregulation deserves another look

THE ISSUE

Sen. Daniel Inouye says he plans to conduct Senate hearings of the possible re-regulation of the aviation industry.
Staggering airlines have increased pressure to abandon deregulation of the airlines enacted three decades ago. The collapse of Aloha Airlines and last week's declaration of bankruptcy by Frontier Airlines indicate a fresh look should be given to regulating airlines serving rural and remote areas.
Congress enacted the Airline Deregulation Act in 1978, ending federal control of commercial aviation and subjecting air fares and flight schedules to the forces of supply and demand. In a hearing last week before the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee, David Banmiller, Aloha's chief executive, said deregulation has been proved to be potentially harmful in achieving stable air serve for small regional markets such as Hawaii.
Inouye said he plans to conduct hearings on possible re-regulation of airlines, and Rep. Mazie Hirono said the issue of airline regulation has drawn interest. Indeed, Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., chairman of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, warned that pressure to re-regulate the industry is mounting in Congress.
The pressure results not only from the demise of Aloha, ATA , Skyway and Skybus and the Frontier bankruptcy but by American Airlines canceling more than 1,000 flights, stranding 100,000 passengers, while wiring in airplanes was fixed. Oberstar suggests that the wiring problems were a result of previous laxity in regulation by the Federal Aviation Administration. When Banmiller complained to the federal Department of Transportation about predatory pricing, he said he was told, "We'll look into it." That lack of response is a sign that regulation is needed in some circumstances, if not across the industry. Rural and remote areas cannot depend on free enterprise to assure adequate service, and congressional hearings should result in a method of addressing the problem.
 
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If there is any hint that this might be seriously considered in congress then you will see some huge consolidations happen. It will be very hard to grow under regulation, so companies will try to get as big a route structure as possible before hand. On the up side it might make it possible to get a national pilot pay scale.
 
This would be a very good thing. No more tearing each other's nuts off, breath a little easier, fewer dirtball customers at the airport, etc.

They [Congress] owe our industry an equal look at re-reg as they consider Open Skies.
 
Interesting, but curious how Re regulation will mesh with open skies.

The push around the world has been deregulation, particularily EU and Asia.

It doesn't appear to this writer, that re regulation is possible.
 
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All of you asking for re regulation should get an idea of how many pilot jobs there actually were back in the 70's.


Plus name one thing the government does well? National parks and monuments are the only thing I can think of.
 
All of you asking for re regulation should get an idea of how many pilot jobs there actually were back in the 70's.


Plus name one thing the government does well? National parks and monuments are the only thing I can think of.

Go read "Hard Landing", and get a clue.
 
All of you asking for re regulation should get an idea of how many pilot jobs there actually were back in the 70's.

Red herring. How many houses were there in the 70s? How many Malls? How many department stores? Everything has grown by leaps and bounds because of a booming economy for the past 30 years. Deregulation didn't cause the explosive growth of the airline industry, a rapidly expanding economy did. If the airlines had never been deregulated, they would still be the same size they are today, only a lot more stable.

Plus name one thing the government does well? National parks and monuments are the only thing I can think of.

They handled the airline business beautifully for 50 years before Carter and Alfred Kahn came in and destroyed it. The CAB worked. Thank God some people in government are seriously looking at fixing this problem and putting it back to the way it used to be.
 
It will just prevent Skybus types from starting...so they can't go out of business. Other than that it will be bad news.
 
Not sure it worked beautifully and ticket prices were substantially higher. Grandma didn't just pop on a plane to go see the grandkids. Now, we can agree that ticket prices are too low, but raise them back to 1970's level and there might be a drop off in passengers and hence a need for less planes and pilots.


Considering that airlines are about the most regulated deregulated bussiness in the US and seeing how the government functions, or rather doesn't, not sure I am getting a warm fuzzy about the concept.
 

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