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New Delta Connection Carriers

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~~~^~~~

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 21, 2001
Posts
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Way to reward the hard working employees at your wholly owned subsidiaries - with a couple of more alter ego competitors. Comair & ASA have no value because they have no market. The future (thanks to Delta) is at not on the Delta property.

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Shuttle America, one of Delta's regional partners, will fly the routes using 70-seat Embraer 170 jet aircraft. Delta also announced service between Salt Lake City and Indianapolis on Monday.
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Effective Oct. 24, Atlanta-based Delta (NYSE: DAL - News) will offer two daily nonstop flights from Austin to Orlando, and two from Orlando to Austin.

Freedom Airlines will operate the Orlando service with Embraer ERJ-145 regional jets.
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Beginning Oct. 15, new Delta Connection carrier Shuttle America will operate two daily non-stop flights between Salt Lake City and Columbus, Ohio, and two daily non-stop flights between Salt Lake City and Indianapolis. Shuttle America will operate the new service with the latest addition to the Delta Connection carrier fleet -- the new two-cabin, 70-seat Embraer 170 jet aircraft.
 
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~~~^~~~ said:
Jeesh, I will be glad when Delta finally goes away. Way to reward the hard working employees at your wholly owned subsidiaries.

Yep, Delta is the only mainline company to do business with contractors, so they deserve to "go away"...

In any case, I thought Freedom Airlines was DOA?? Whahappened?
 
DCI boosts service to Orlando
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August 15, 2005





New Delta Connection carrier Freedom Airlines will offer new nonstop service beginning in October between Orlando, Fla., and six destinations: Austin, Texas; Charlottesville, Va.; Chattanooga, Tenn.; Fort Wayne, Ind.; Jackson, Miss.; and Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport. Delta Connection carriers plan to increase daily service between Orlando and nine more markets by December.

"Delta is continuing to respond to customers' requests for more nonstop flights to their favorite Florida destinations," said J.T. Fisher, president and chief executive officer-Delta Connection. "Thanks to the addition of Freedom Airlines to the Delta Connection program, we are able to connect more of our customers in the Southeast and Midwest to some of the world's leading vacation venues in Orlando."

To celebrate the new service, Delta is offering customers low introductory sale fares.
 
I.P. Freley said:
Yep, Delta is the only mainline company to do business with contractors, so they deserve to "go away"....
Delta is the only company stupid enough to generate alter ego competition & growth (lower costs) while trying to sell their wholly owned regionals which have increasing costs because they are locked out of the next generation of equipment. Delta has destroyed their own brand on so many levels that the "brand" is now meaningless.

Also, in my view the Delta MEC and Delta management are in large part responsible for the devolving standard of our profession thanks to just this sort of alter ego replacement flying.

I don't expect things to turn around. Every move the past two management teams have made have only taken us closer to the abyss. So candidly, Delta is on its way to being history. Do you see any reason for a different conclusion?
 
~~~^~~~ said:
Way to reward the hard working employees at your wholly owned subsidiaries - with a couple of more alter ego competitors.

Well, you wouldn't want any predatory scope limiting access to the DL code now would you? Aren't you a supporter of a lawsuit that has as its premise the belief that no pilot group controls/owns or can place limits on outsourcing?

Quote:

1. Can the DAL pilot group, or any pilot group own/control their code?







In a word, NO. The “code” under which your airline operates is not owned by the Delta pilots and it is not controlled by the Delta pilots. The “code” is owned by Delta Air Lines, Inc. and they alone “control” it. The same applies to other “codes” owned by other airlines.


 
FDJ2 said:
Well, you wouldn't want any predatory scope limiting access to the DL code now would you? Aren't you a supporter of a lawsuit that has as its premise the belief that no pilot group controls/owns or can place limits on outsourcing?
You exemplify the thinking on your MEC and the reason why Giambusso and Mullin reached agreements to lead us to where Delta is now. You are so giddy to see an ASA, or Comair, pilot take a screwing that you completly overlook the fact that these are your 737-200's being replaced. But hey, you don't care, you must be on the MD88 now. When you are on the 767, you will stop caring about narrowbodies all together. As long as you get what you want.

Yes, I support the RJDC lawsuit. The RJDC effort promotes the right of employees to contract with those who have operational control of their airplanes. Eventually, this will happen and you too will benefit by binding the Company to the pilots performing the flying.

Delta's strength is its network. That network is crumbling at its core - the revenue feed into its hubs. The 737's and MD88's are getting old and expensive to maintain. The CRJ200 is getting expensive to operate on $2 a gallon Jet A and the FAA is not helping with weight assumptions that limit what revenue can be carried on short flights.

You do want ASA and Comair to be sold, right? Then you should understand that this action lowers ASA and Comair's market value.
 
~~~^~~~ said:
Delta is the only company stupid enough to generate alter ego competition & growth (lower costs) while trying to sell their wholly owned regionals which have increasing costs because they are locked out of the next generation of equipment.

So candidly, Delta is on its way to being history. Do you see any reason for a different conclusion?

Yes I do. From a business perspective it makes perfect sense to use a less expensive regional partner. In doing so they even managed to get Comair to take a pay freeze and are using this against ASA in their contract negotiations. Furthermore, they help insulate themselves from disgruntled labor groups that can paralyze their operation, in case anyone forgot what happened in the spring of '01. They also gain access to the most desirable 70-seat airplane on the market by doing business with a company that has deliveries of these airplanes already scheduled. Sounds like smart business to me, if we take a moment to detach ourselves from our own vested interests.

Delta would be even further in the red if they expanded their wholly-owned operation in place of increasing reliance on contractors... otherwise they wouldn't be doing it.

As for diluting the brand, you'll have to show me evidence that these contractors are doing a noticeably worse job in the Delta system before I'll accept the assertion that SA, CHQ or Freedom are somehow responsible for driving away customers. In at least two of these cases they haven't started operating for Delta yet so in nine months we can revisit this and see how all involved are doing. Ironically, the best way to drive away customers and/or damage your corporate image is to cancel countless flights leave them stranded during the Christmas holiday, which was done by one of those can't-do-any-wrong wholly-owned carriers.
 
~~~^~~~ said:
Delta has destroyed their own brand on so many levels that the "brand" is now meaningless.

Oh, I think when customers start flying on the E-170, the "Delta brand" will convey value right away. So much so, that they'll be more apt to schedule future trips using these aircraft. Much in the same way that commuter customers looked to fly the RJs versus props.
To management, it doesn't matter internally what the brand is. It only matters to the customers.
 
IP and Miles:

You bring up some valid points, but are missing the bigger picture.

  • The pilots serving at the various alter egos will also want better pay and working conditions once the 18 month upgrades and paint jobs begin to fade.
  • Young crews and young equipment are always cheaper. What happens to you five years from now?
  • If you were selling an old car, would leave it broken, then park it in between your Corvette and your Mercedes?
New planes and quick upgrades are very appealing. But, we are seeing this industry devolve into operators with a 5 year, or less, time horizon. Chautauqua's pricing structure under these contracts is unsustainable without growth, meaning that these airlines will grow like a weed on glyphosate and die just as quickly when the growth is up.

Delta is allowing their wholly owned regionals to "mature" and getting older in the airline business is a very bad thing. Not only are the airplanes and crews getting more expensive, things are getting so out of hand that ASA can not hire and retain enough pilots to sustain its operation. We lost 40 lines of flying last month alone and the explanation I hear is "crew shortage." After all, who would want to work here - all the shiny new E170's are going to the new exciting alter ego carriers.

Regardless of whether your time horizon is 20 years or the next 20 days, Delta's destruction of a core asset does not bode well for Delta's survival. CHQ, Republic Wexford, Mid Atlantic, Shuttle, Freedom airlines are getting some pretty airplanes, but without Delta's marketing and network are one flight away from being parked in the desert besides the 737-200 they are replacing. Just like us, you need Delta to survive.
 
All of this 170/190 flying done at McDonald wages is really hurting everyone's chances of ever getting to a major. Seems the best thing to do is to bring the planes to mainline and setting a B scale or something. Surely a B scale would be higher than an "express" wage.

Anyone agree? Or am I the retard? I personally don't want to be stuck flying a pencil jet for 30 yrs to all of these markets where DC-9s and 737 used to serve at my $64/hr. I'll be more than happy serving these market at say $120/hr in something bigger. Better yet would be to get paid $120/hr to sit in the right seat doing one leg a day to Vegas and having something more than a reduced overnight! JMHO.
 

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