Hey Flop, welcome back--we missed you!
It didn't work out to well because there was a lot of competition at IAH. You could not start up 40 years ago, and you can't start international today, in a healthy competitive environment. There were 7 open gates, where was SWA effect? Matter of fact, where has it been in Houston? The City complains of high airfares, SWA has been at Hobby since the start!
Not really sure what your argument is here... Are you saying that Southwest doesn't compete, or that Unical charges way too much for fares out of IAH? Could you rephrase, please.
And as far as "a lot of competition," there certainly wasn't any competition between IAH and DAL--nobody else was flying that route. Turns out, there wasn't enough demand either. That's why we abandoned that route.
You found a couple links that cast a little doubt on my version of how SWA came to get the EWR gates, but even so it's clear in the text that the only choice UAL/CAL had was SWA. The only "yes' we were going to hear was SWA and it was very much a gift.
The only choice? Why would you think that? Continental (and United)
chose Southwest, because they thought it was in their
own selfish best interest (Not that I'm knocking that--businesses are supposed to act in their own best interest). They could have picked anyone else who wanted them. ANYONE. Continental
preferred that Southwest got those slots, because they thought we would be the least amount of total competition in the NYC area for them. The article actually hints that Continental bypassed the "fair" way of divestiture by
picking its own competition. So, if there was any "gift," it was to Continental for the unique ability to be able to
pick who got their divestitures, instead of the normal slot auction. So I guess I should say to you, "You're welcome!"
Google this PDF: Airport Business Practices and their Impact on Airline Competition. Or, don't and let's just drop this. Why the FAA would develop and print this sort of thing and then give SWA whatever it wants makes zero sense.
I read it; it was an interesting article. Thanks.
I don't know how you think you're using it in an argument against Southwest, however. Despite your continued attempts to show that Southwest was "given" things others didn't get, this also isn't it. Nobody has ever "given" Southwest jack squat--except a hard time.
It talks about "equal access" to airports. It then goes on to mention airlines that interfere with other airlines' ability to fly out of the airports they want to. Sound familiar? That article's argument is actually
against your company's position that Southwest shouldn't get to use Hobby for the flying that it wants to do.
You're also missing the point about who needs to provide "equal access." The answer is, it's the airport itself, not one of its freakin'
tenants. That's not our job. If and when other airlines want international flight access out of HOU, it should be, and
will be, provided by the airport itself, not by Southwest. If and when there's enough demand, they
will expand the international facilities; it's in their own best interest (not to mention, the legal responsibility regarding "fairness" of the airport authority).
Be careful for what you wish for, however--are you sure Unical wants
even more international LCC competition out of the Houston area? That might further bite into your monopoly on Houston international flying.
Bubba