Virgin America Up, Up And Away
VIRGIN AMERICA UP, UP AND AWAY
New low-cost airline to fly from SFO to New York and L.A. -- Burlingame-based company plans to expand service quickly
David Armstrong, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, July 19, 2007
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Virgin America finally takes to the skies next month, shaking up the Bay Area's air travel market with cheap flights to New York and Los Angeles.
Virgin, based in Burlingame, will start Aug. 8 with two daily nonstop flights between San Francisco International Airport and New York's John F. Kennedy Airport and five daily nonstop flights between SFO and Los Angeles International Airport.
The entry of a new low-cost carrier into the market could reduce fares on many routes for Bay Area passengers while multiplying departure times and destinations.
Introductory fares start at $44 one way to Los Angeles in coach and $149 in first class, while fares to New York begin at $139 one way in coach and $389 in first class.
In addition,
Virgin America gives a shot in the arm to the region's airline industry. The airline says it eventually will create 3,000 to 5,000 jobs here for mechanics, flight attendants, pilots, reservationists and others.
Already, such established discount players as Southwest Airlines and JetBlue Airways are reacting by beefing up operations at SFO, the region's largest airport.
Virgin America hopes to expand relatively quickly.
The airline plans to increase flights between San Francisco and New York to four a day by Sept. 9 and ramp up service to other cities shortly afterward. On Sept. 26, the airline will begin two daily flights between San Francisco and Washington Dulles International Airport. On Oct. 10, it will begin service between SFO and Las Vegas with three daily nonstop flights.
The airline "expects to serve as many as 10 cities within a year of operation and up to 30 cities within five years of service,'' it said in a statement.
Tickets were to have gone on sale about 2:30 a.m. today on the airline's Web site,
www.virginamerica.com, according to
Virgin America spokesman Gareth Edmondson-Jones.
"Whether you're traveling in first class or the main cabin, we hope to offer our guests excellent service at affordable prices,'' said
Virgin America President and CEO Fred Reid.
It's been a long time coming for
Virgin America, 25 percent of which is owned by
Virgin Atlantic Airways owner and business tycoon Richard Branson. It also licenses the
Virgin brand from Branson.
Virgin America chose SFO as its home airport in June 2004. But takeoff was delayed by a long wait to line up financing and regulators' concerns that Branson, a British citizen, would control the airline in violation of U.S. laws requiring that U.S. airlines be controlled by Americans.
Virgin America, which will fly Airbus A-320 aircraft, has hired 400 staffers and says it eventually will hire from 3,000 to 5,000 people, many of them in the Bay Area.
The new airline will fly into crowded skies.
Discount leader Southwest Airlines plans to return to SFO on Aug. 26, after a six-year absence, in part prompted by the emergence of
Virgin America. Low-fare carrier JetBlue Airways began flying between SFO and JFK this spring. SkyBus, another low-cost carrier, began service last month at Oakland International Airport, and other discounters such as Spirit, Frontier and AirTran also serve Bay Area airports. Additionally, United Airlines offers a Premium Service for high-end business travelers between SFO and JFK.
Virgin America's decision to begin flying in the midst of what is turning out to be an extremely turbulent summer travel season marked by numerous flight cancellations and delays could backfire, said David Stempler, president of the Air Travelers Association, a passenger advocacy organization in Washington.
"Launching in the summer may not be a good idea,'' Stempler said. "A lot of leisure travel reservations were made well in advance. In the Midwest and on the East Coast, you have a lot of thunderstorms to deal with.''
Stempler said
Virgin America's chances for success hinge on how well it meets consumers' three main criteria in buying a plane ticket: "They are price, airport convenience and frequent flier programs,'' he said.
Virgin America will offer a frequent flier program it calls by the idiosyncratic name eleVAte. The airline didn't provide details.
By choosing to offer transcontinental service as well as short-hop regional flights,
Virgin America is flying in the teeth of conventional wisdom, which holds that low-fare airlines make money by flying short, quick routes that enable them to fill their aircraft several times a day, turn the planes around fast and work the planes hard. This is the model pioneered by low-fare leader Southwest.
"Southwest is offering something significantly different than we are,'' Reid said. "We are suited for long-haul because of the tremendous quality of the program.''
While Southwest and JetBlue fly all-economy-class planes,
Virgin America hopes to set itself apart by offering first-class seating as well. The carrier also emphasizes its leather seats, seatback video screens and a sophisticated in-flight entertainment system that includes channels such as FX, Independent Film Channel and the Food Channel -- all amenities that
Virgin America executives feel are attractions on lengthy flights.
Reid, who agreed to step down as
Virgin America's CEO by mid-November as part of a deal to satisfy federal regulators who thought he was too beholden to Branson, said he was proud of getting
Virgin America off the ground at last.
"I am focusing 100 percent on this airline, which I love,'' he said. "It's been such a tough slog. I have such appreciation for my teammates. I have no plans for afterward.''
Where new airline will fly
Virgin America will offer introductory fares on four routes:
SFO to JFK flights start Aug. 8
Coach $139
First class $389
JetBlue coach $209*
*Starting price for flights on the same day
SFO to LAX flights start Aug. 8
Coach $44
First class $149
Southwest coach $49*
*Flight on same day from Oakland to LAX
SFO to Dulles flights start Sept. 26
Fares to be announced
SFO to Las Vegas flights start Oct. 10
Fares: $44 coach, $149 first class
Source:
Virgin America
E-mail David Armstrong at [email protected].
This article appeared on page
A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle