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Skybus to start flying May 20

  • Thread starter Thread starter buxflyr
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If everybody donated say $5 on this board and we pooled it ................

WE COULD PURCHASE THEM AND FARM OUT TO THE INDONESION PILOTS .......AND HOOKERS....WE COULD CALL THEM HOSTITUTES........50,000MILES AND YOU GET TO BE A MEMBER OF THE "LOVE YOU LONG TIME" CLUB!!
 
Hokay, honest to god question here, how many planes do these people actually have on property? So far I have found evidence of two, one painted a$$ orange and one as a giant nationwide billboard.

From personal experience, their online t-shirt store took literally 10 minutes to put up. Anyone with an IQ equivalent to Forest Gump's can create one on cafepress.

Maybe we take the $5 and get every skybus employee a t-shirt that says "face it, i f---ed up, i work for skybus"
 
Uncertainty Of Finances Halts Skybus

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=9F0CE1D61530F932A25754C0A965958260


Skybus, a fledgling no-frills charter service offering low fares between Florida and the Northeast, stopped flying June 29 amid conflicting reports over unpaid bills. Nevertheless, Skybus said it was grounded only temporarily and would resume service soon.


Because Skybus was a public charter and lacked approvals from the Government to operate its own flights, it hired another charter carrier to serve its routes. Its most recent carrier, Express One of Dallas, said it stopped flying for Skybus because it was owed more than $500,000 from the Fort Lauderdale-based company, which began operating last September, using Jet Expeditions. Skybus said it had not paid Express One because it was unable to collect more than $1 million in ticket revenues from CD Travel, an agency in Fort Lauderdale that handles its reservations and ticketing. CD officials said Skybus has received every dollar it was owed.


Skybus also said it was owed about $600,000 from processors of its credit card sales. A person familiar with the company's affairs said the processors were witholding payment because too many Skybus customers were charging back their Skybus tickets.


Meanwhile, the Department of Transportation is investigating Skybus's finances. The investigation would not block the charter from submitting a new prospectus for the Government to review, but that process typically requires 10 days. Skybus officials said they hoped to receive quicker approval, although none was imminent as of the beginning of this month.

Skybus was founded last year by roughly 100 investors, including former Pan Am, Eastern and Midway employees. Using four DC-9's, it offered service from Newark; Chicago; Worcester, Mass., and three Florida cities -- Fort Lauderdale, Orlando and St. Petersburg. Most one-way flights on Skybus cost between $99 and $119, but the passengers paid extra for meals, beverages and check-in baggage.



By ADAM BRYANT
Published: July 11, 1993
 
Last edited:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=9F0CE1D61530F932A25754C0A965958260


Skybus, a fledgling no-frills charter service offering low fares between Florida and the Northeast, stopped flying June 29 amid conflicting reports over unpaid bills. Nevertheless, Skybus said it was grounded only temporarily and would resume service soon.


Because Skybus was a public charter and lacked approvals from the Government to operate its own flights, it hired another charter carrier to serve its routes. Its most recent carrier, Express One of Dallas, said it stopped flying for Skybus because it was owed more than $500,000 from the Fort Lauderdale-based company, which began operating last September, using Jet Expeditions. Skybus said it had not paid Express One because it was unable to collect more than $1 million in ticket revenues from CD Travel, an agency in Fort Lauderdale that handles its reservations and ticketing. CD officials said Skybus has received every dollar it was owed.


Skybus also said it was owed about $600,000 from processors of its credit card sales. A person familiar with the company's affairs said the processors were witholding payment because too many Skybus customers were charging back their Skybus tickets.


Meanwhile, the Department of Transportation is investigating Skybus's finances. The investigation would not block the charter from submitting a new prospectus for the Government to review, but that process typically requires 10 days. Skybus officials said they hoped to receive quicker approval, although none was imminent as of the beginning of this month.

Skybus was founded last year by roughly 100 investors, including former Pan Am, Eastern and Midway employees. Using four DC-9's, it offered service from Newark; Chicago; Worcester, Mass., and three Florida cities -- Fort Lauderdale, Orlando and St. Petersburg. Most one-way flights on Skybus cost between $99 and $119, but the passengers paid extra for meals, beverages and check-in baggage.


By ADAM BRYANT
Published: July 11, 1993

Not that it matters, but that was completely ill revel ant to this airline...other than you wanted to post "fledgling" and "no frills".
 
"ill revel ant= an ant that has partied too much."

Now that's funny!
 

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