Travelogue

January 17, 2008

AMR posts $504 million 2007 profit despite fourth-quarter loss ATW

American Airlines parent AMR Corp. reported full-year 2007 net income of $504 million, more than double the $231 million earned in the prior year, despite a fourth-quarter net loss of $69 million that it attributed largely to "record fuel prices." The quarterly loss was reversed from a profit of $17 million in the year-ago period and ended the carrier's streak of six straight quarters in the black. But Chairman and CEO Gerard Arpey noted that AMR posted back-to-back profitable years for the first time since 1999-2000 despite "enormous challenges from unprecedented weather disruptions, air traffic control problems and record fuel prices."

Air France-KLM could back Delta's merger bid Reuters

Air France-KLM could provide strategic or financial help in Delta Air Lines' pursuit of a merger with another airline, a newspaper reported on Thursday. A US congressman on Wednesday said Delta has begun merger talks with Northwest Airlines, and media reports have said it was also talking to United Airlines parent UAL. The Wall Street Journal report, quoting people familiar with negotiations, said Northwest was more likely to emerge as Delta's "preferred partner" and that Air France-KLM may back up that bid.

In the math of mergers, airlines fail NYT

Airline stocks rallied last week on news that Delta Air Lines was mulling a takeover of either United Airlines or Northwest Airlines, suggesting that many investors think airline mergers are a brilliant idea. Airline Merger Match-Up The rally was an especially strong endorsement of mergers because it was broad — all the big carriers’ shares rose, on the assumption that one merger would lead to another. But close scrutiny of the business rationale for airline mergers suggests that any improved profits from consolidation will likely be short-lived, at best.

D.C. airport pass speeds travelers clear to the gate WP

Washington area travelers will soon be able to speed more quickly through airport security if they are willing to pay a fee, provide personal information to the government and allow their fingerprints and eyes to be scanned at checkpoints. The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, which operates Reagan National and Dulles International airports, awarded a contract yesterday to a company that operates the federal government's security program, which is known as Registered Traveler.

EC GDS proposals "bizarre" BTE

The EC's proposals to de-regulate GDSs in Europe without naming Air France, Lufthansa and Iberia as parent carriers were "bizarre." The charge was made by Bryan Conway, head of EMEA for Travelport. He told 110 delegates at the Focus Partnership Meeting (the group representing independent UK agents) that the EC had drawn up a new code of conduct with safeguards which required all airlines and GDSs to participate equally. But he added: "There appears to be some confusion as to the take up of parent carriers. It suggests that the code regarding parent carriers might not apply to Air France, Lufthansa and Iberia which own nearly 47% of Amadeus."

GTMC hits out at easyJet charges BTE

easyJet was accused of ripping off agents by charging €12 for return bookings made through the Amadeus and Travelport GDSs. The accusation came from the UK Guild of Travel Management companies (GTMC). It said one suggestion from its member was to boycott bookings of the low cost carrier on the GDS and "screen scrape" instead. "That will mean extra work, and there will be a cost to our clients, but it won't be anything like the €12 rip-off that is currently being proposed," Philip Carlisle, the Guild's ceo, said.

Feds seek comments on air consumer protections Management.travel

Air passenger rights is a hot topic in the travel industry, especially as airport and air traffic congestion trigger lengthy delays, but a federal government request for public comment on customer service rules thus far has not drawn a commensurate response. A seven-point proposal from the U.S. Department of Transportation published in the Federal Register on Nov. 20, 2007 at press time had garnered about 170 public filings, most of them a form letter coordinated by the Coalition for an Airline Passengers' Bill of Rights. Interested parties have until Jan. 22 to provide feedback.

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Date: November 19th 2009

November 19, 2009

The Honorable Ray LaHood
Secretary
U.S. Department of Transportation
1200 New Jersey Ave. SE
Washington, DC 20590

Dear Secretary LaHood,

We the undersigned applaud your most important leadership in forming the Federal Advisory Committee on the Future of Aviation. Never has the future of U.S. commercial aviation been so threatened, or has there been so much at stake. However, the initiative risks failure if it proceeds, as many previous commissions have, in the absence of well-debated and agreed upon objectives for U.S. national transportation and air transportation policies.

You asked for suggestions regarding the top five problems facing the industry. The über problem from which virtually every other major industry difficulty subsequently flows is that the U.S. has never had a coherent national air transportation policy that has been updated over time. What’s more, one cannot select the right problems to address, or adequately evaluate solutions, unless policy objectives are set forth in a clear manner.

When initiatives such as the 1993 Baliles Commission fail to produce desired changes, some voice frustration, but fail to ask why. Recommendations are transmitted to Congress where a policy-framework to evaluate and support adoption of proposals is virtually nonexistent. What’s more, vested interests, including some represented on these commissions, work to ensure that nothing comes of recommendations.

As noted during the forum last week, 16 years after the Baliles Commission most problems facing the airline industry remain. We now run the risk of a more damaging repeat of this outcome though. If in 16 years, in 2025, the destination for aviation is essentially 1993 with the same unsolved problems that Governor Baliles wrestled with, then we will have a disaster on our hands.

We deregulated 31 years ago but never had an adequate debate regarding public policy objectives and desired outcomes. Instead of a coherent air transportation policy we have a patchwork of legislative and regulatory prescriptions that are a consequence of lurching from crisis to crisis.

We need to develop public-policy objectives and a framework for effective analysis and oversight such that it does not take a tragedy outside Buffalo to recognize a flawed regional airline business model. Or, to identify that there is significant safety and security risk when U.S. aircraft are sent to third-world countries to be overhauled by workers whose backgrounds cannot be verified, who are not tested for drugs and alcohol, who rely on pictures in manufacturers’ manuals to perform repairs because they cannot read detailed English instructions and whose oversight by FAA and TSA is uneven, or non-existent.

We urge you Secretary LaHood to allocate the first 2 months of the committee’s efforts to debating and building consensus around transportation and air transportation public-policy objectives. Importantly, we recommend that the process be transparent and open to the press, as the Baliles Commission was. Let’s take advantage of the crisis gripping the airline industry to forge a future that truly strengthens U.S. travel and tourism as well as our economy, workforce, way of life and position in international aviation.

Sincerely,

American Society of Travel Agents
International Brotherhood of Teamsters
Business Travel Coalition
Aerospace States Association
Consumer Travel Alliance
Travel Management Alliance
International Association of Exhibitions and Events
Association of Retail Travel Agents
Advanced Travel Partners
The Travel Team, Inc.
Austin Travel
Balboa Travel Management
Eaton Corporation
HealthCare California
Thermo Fisher Scientific
Lowe's Companies, Inc.
Sapient
Trondent Development Corp.
Zetron, Inc.
Quad City International Airport
Northern Kentucky C.V.B.
AAA Tidewater Virginia
Aladdin Travel & Meeting Planners
Aviation Innovation, LLC
Blake Associates
Caldwell Travel, Inc.
Chase & Associates
CI Travel
Clear Sky Associates
Consulting Strategies
Cresta World Travel Ltd
El Sol Travel
FLO Corporation
Fox World Travel



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