Vne
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 18, 2005
- Posts
- 143
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But not by enough to really change the way things are done by MOST of the carriers.I believe the BK laws were changed back in 2005. The same laws that affected personal filings also affected business filings. DL and NW just made it in under the wire.
FedEx would have to resort to flying the Falcon 20's again!! 4-5 Falcon 20's flying wing tip to wing tip all headed for LAX....That really sounds efficient.....
Yes. All that too.It would mean:
1. Fewer aircraft, overcapacity is a major problem, and regulation would set frequency and aircraft size for everyone.
2. Fewer pilots, for that reduction in capacity.
3. Angry, angry citizens, either from steep increase in ticket prices or the increase in taxes that would be needed to subsidize fares to keep them low enough to avoid public outcry.
Something has to give, this insanity has got to end, but I don't think the house or the senate, who rely on their constituents to vote them back into office come re-election time, will ever follow through on it.
Too much fallout to suffer.
The DA-20 has a AFU flight control system, combined with AQ varible geomerty off of the co-pilots pitot tube, and bungee strings, I don't think I would like flying the DA-20 in parade formation. BTW AFU = (Artifical Feel Unit)Whats wrong with flying Falcon 20s in formation? :laugh:
Wow, I couldn't agree more on this. The points about "two strikes you're out" for companies and the time bar on management would cause people to think twice about pursuing short-term policies and cavalierly entering bankruptcy as a business strategy, the way things are now.But not by enough to really change the way things are done by MOST of the carriers.
This is one of the reasons I think Frontier is on the fence; the timelines required and new DiP financing and exit financing structure requirements are pretty strict, and they'll be hard-pressed (not impossible, just very difficult) to get it all lined up in time.
Most Ch. 11 bankruptcies are a very thought-out process, and their suitors (creditors for DiP and exiting) are lined up before they go in.
I would like to see legislation that does 3 things with the airlines:
1. Requires each airline to charge AT LEAST the cost of producing their ticket ON EACH SEGMENT individually, not "taking a loss on leg 1 to drive someone out of business then making it up on leg 2".
2. Restricts airlines from filing bankruptcy more than once every 20 years. If they can't make it, they liquidate.
3. Restrict ANY senior management official (from V.P. of ANY department on up) from holding ANY position at an airline for 20 years from the date of the EXIT of that airline from bankruptcy. You mis-managed a carrier that badly? Get treated like Frank Lorenzo - get out and STAY OUT!
Responsible management combined with harsh penalties for failure combined with forced responsibility in fare pricing would accomplish nearly as much as re-regulation. Maybe not for the individual employees but, again, the average taxpayer doesn't give a rat about us.
I personally believe this is an easier "sell" on the Hill than full re-regulation of this industry, which would cost BILLIONS our government doesn't really have to be throwing around. We're already in debt with the rest of the world badly enough as it is...
The DA-20 has a AFU flight control system, combined with AQ varible geomerty off of the co-pilots pitot tube, and bungee strings, I don't think I would like flying the DA-20 in parade formation. BTW AFU = (Artifical Feel Unit)
good that is the way it should be. Its a privilege... It should cost more than 200 bucks for the average joe blow to fly in a pressurized aluminum tube 30,000 feet in the air. Something is jacked up when it costs more to drive my car on vacation than flying.
It would be stability for communities, for employees, and for the passengers. It would mean fewer pilots and planes in the air, but we are headed there anyway. It would mean ending the race to the bottom. Deregulation has been a complete and total failure. Besides, the airlines were not truely deregulated anyway.
It would mean:
1. Fewer aircraft, overcapacity is a major problem, and regulation would set frequency and aircraft size for everyone.
2. Fewer pilots, for that reduction in capacity.
3. Angry, angry citizens, either from steep increase in ticket prices or the increase in taxes that would be needed to subsidize fares to keep them low enough to avoid public outcry.
OK... which came first, the chicken or the egg?Come on Lear, don't tell me that you've fallen for the Alfred Kahn lies, too!
We don't have an overcapacity problem. We have an under-priced-fares problem. Reregulation would not require a reduction in capacity.
Can't have it both ways, buddy...Again, no need for a reduction in capacity, no need for a reduction in pilots.
I wish... I don't think they'll react soon enough to do anything meaningful.At some point, congress will realize that there is going to be huge backlash either way, and they'll go for the real fix of reregulation. I think the current merger-palooza might delay the inevitable return to regulation, but it'll come eventually. This industry simply can't survive without some government controls of fares and route authority.
OK... which came first, the chicken or the egg?
Are fares low because we have over-capacity and airlines pricing their product below what it costs to produce it in order to compete for the traveler?
Or do we have over-capacity that needs to be fed resulting in lower and lower ticket prices until we reach the point that the 80's leftover with the mullet is going to see that "hot" chick he met on MySpace for $39 each way?
You're assuming people would still buy tickets at that highly-increased price in the same number they do now...Low fares are the result of management chasing market share while ignoring profits. Capacity isn't the problem. If a new CAB came in and controlled fares to end the fare wars, load factors would reduce slightly, but profits would soar, and no capacity would need to be cut.