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LATEST NEWS
12:50 PM HST Friday
Hawaiian Airlines partners with Island Air
[font=Times New Roman,Times,Serif]Hawaiian Airlines will add flights to Hilo and Maui and partner with Island Air to improve interisland service.
"Hilo and Maui residents have been calling for more service during these hours and we're going to provide it," said Joshua Gotbaum, airline trustee.
The airline will add a flight in the morning on the Honolulu to Maui route and an afternoon flight on the Honolulu to Hilo route starting Aug. 1. It expands each route by 861 seats per week.
The airline plans to increase its interisland summer capacity by 17 percent or 184,000 seats. This compares to competitor Aloha Airlines upping its capacity 28 percent this summer. Hawaiian will fly a daily average of 115 flights during the weekdays and 123 flights on the weekends.
To gain more seat capacity and exit the nonperforming Lanai and Molokai markets, Hawaiian will tie up with Island Air.
The commuter service Island Air split from Aloha Airgroup, the parent company of Aloha Airlines.
Hawaiian's new code-share pact with Island Air, effective Aug. 1, will enable the former to pull out its daily service to Lanai and Molokai. The airline will offer instead Island Air's seven flights to Lanai and eight flights to Molokai.
Hawaiian's flights in that market were on its new jets but on average carried 23 people on an aircraft that seats 123 people.
"It's been something I wanted to do since my first month at Hawaiian," Gotbaum said. "While Island Air was a subsidiary of Aloha we couldn't do it as there would have been potential legal complications."
It also opens up new markets for Hawaiian, Gotbaum said.
The airline stopped service to West Maui after it acquired the new aircraft. Now with the code-share agreement it can offer that as another route to its passengers.
"Our 37-seat de Havilland Dash-8 aircraft are better suited to serve smaller airports and resort communities with greater frequency than their jets," said Neil Takekawa, president and CEO of Island Air. "It makes sense for us to work together where our operations complement each other."
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