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The Biden administration is considering new rules that would require airlines to pay passengers for significant delays within a carrier’s control. Other proposals include requiring airlines to rebook passengers at no additional cost on the next available flight, covering meals, overnight lodging and related transportation expenses for stranded passengers. It comes as over 60% of three-hour or longer domestic flight delays were “airline-caused” in 2022 and 2023, according to airline data submitted to DOT. The news release noted that the U.K., E.U., Canada and Brazil have consumer protections to compensate passengers and provide services of significant delays in place. “One study found that the European Union’s compensation and service requirements reduced the likelihood and duration of flight delays,” the DOT said in a news release said.
Persons: Biden Organizations: U.S . Department of Transportation, Office, DOT, Airlines, America, American Airlines, United, Federal Aviation Administration Locations: Congress, Canada, Brazil, U.S, Delta
Starbucks' airport location staff — and company technology — will be put to the test this week during some of the busiest travel days of the year. For the aviation industry, bottlenecks at airport Starbucks are just another sign of soaring demand and overcrowded airports. Licensing modelA challenge for Starbucks is that licensees — not Starbucks itself – operate its airport locations. Starbucks opened its first airport location with licensee HMSHost in 1991 at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, which serves Starbucks' hometown. While HMSHost still operates the overwhelming majority of Starbucks' airport cafes, more operators, such as Paradies Lagardere and OTG, have since taken a swing at it.
Persons: Jeff Greenberg, Coresa Barrino, Brian Niccol, Niccol, Jennifer Simkins, Ursula Cassinerio, HMSHost, Paradies, OTG, Mark Kalinowski, Leslie Josephs, Kevin Schimpf, Sara Senatore ., Senatore Organizations: Miami International Airport, Universal, Getty, Starbucks, New, Transportation Security Administration, U.S . Department of Transportation, Aviation Administration, Dallas Fort Worth International, International, Airlines, Tacoma International Airport, HMSHost, Equity Research, LaGuardia, CNBC, Bank of America Locations: Miami, Charlotte , North Carolina, Charlotte, Chipotle, U.S, Seattle, New York City
Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said the Trump administration's approach to regulation could be a "breath of fresh air." Speaking to reporters ahead of Delta's investor day, Bastian noted that President-elect Donald Trump campaigned saying he would take a "fresh look" at regulation and bureaucracy. "We have to invest in this industry," American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said at the Skift Aviation Forum in Dallas last week. In an interview last week, Sun Country Airlines CEO Jude Bricker said: "We just need stability and resources at the DOT." Industry members and analysts also expect the incoming administration to be more open to mergers and consolidation.
Persons: Ed Bastian, Bastian, Donald Trump, Pete Buttigieg, Trump, Sean Duffy, Duffy didn't, Robert Isom, Jude Bricker, Joe Biden's Organizations: Delta Air Lines Inc, Delta Air, Trump, U.S . Department of Transportation, Delta, Fox Business, U.S, Federal Aviation Administration, American Airlines, Skift Aviation, Sun Country Airlines, Industry, Alaska Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, Biden's Justice, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue Airways, JetBlue Locations: New York, Dallas, U.S
Canadian Labor Minister Steven MacKinnon has invoked federal powers to end work stoppages at the ports of Vancouver, Prince Rupert and Montreal, ordering binding and final arbitration between labor unions and ports ownership. Strike actions by unions and ports ownership lockouts had hit both coasts of the key U.S. northern trade partner. "The lockouts of the Canadian ports were causing ships to divert and contributing to congestion and delays throughout North America. Under section 107 of the Canada Labor Code, the Labor Minister can order binding arbitration to end labor disputes. Existing collective agreements will remain in place pending a new deal being reached between dockworker unions and the ports.
Persons: Steven MacKinnon, Vancouver , Prince Rupert, Prince Rupert, Vancouver and Prince Rupert, Stephen Lamar, Lamar, MacKinnon, Mackinnon Organizations: Canadian Labor, Canadian, Retail Council, Canada, CNBC, Local, U.S . Department of Transportation, American Apparel & Footwear Association, U.S . West Coast, Canada Labor, Labor, Canadian Pacific Kansas City, Canadian National Railway Co, Canada Industrial Relations Locations: Vancouver, Montreal, U.S, United States, Canada, North America
Key ports on Canada's West Coast, including its largest container port in Vancouver and the Port of Prince Rupert, were shut down by a labor strike on Monday. According to the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, $800 million in trade flows through West Coast ports every day. Montreal processes 40% of all East Coast container traffic. Approximately $572 million in container trade arrives daily in the U.S. from Canada, according to U.S. Census data. A temporary loss of the Canadian West Coast trade gateway could push carriers to discharge import cargo along the already strained U.S. West Coast, said Alan Baer, CEO of OL USA, further increasing the dwell time of containers and elongating overall transits.
Persons: of Prince Rupert, Vancouver and Prince Rupert, Prince Rupert, Eric Byer, Paul Brashier, Alan Baer, Steve Lamar, Frank Morena, Steven MacKinnon Organizations: Greater, Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, Local, Port, Canadian Union of Public Employees, U.S . Department of Transportation, Alliance for Chemical, Canadian Pacific Kansas City, Canadian National Railway, Logistics, International, Warehouse Union of Canada, ITS Logistics, East, Canadian West, USA, U.S ., American Apparel and Footwear Association, British Columbia Maritime Employers Association, Federal Mediation, Conciliation Services, Canada, ILWU, U.S, Canadian Labor Locations: West Coast, Vancouver, of, Foreman, Greater Vancouver, U.S, Port of Montreal, Montreal, United States, of Vancouver, Canada, Canadian West Coast, Port, Midwest, Asia, U.S . West Coast, Los Angeles, Long Beach , California, British Columbia, American, British, East Coast
Groups in favor of the ballot measure are making a final push as early voting is underway, with hundreds of thousands of ballots already cast. While some states, like California and Vermont, passed abortion rights ballot measures by well over 60%, in other states, such as Michigan and Ohio, they passed by about 56%. Jeanette Nuñez, who opposes the ballot measure, accused the abortion rights ads of being deceptive. And one state agency that regulates health care providers, including abortion clinics, launched a website last month opposing the ballot measure. “But they don’t necessarily connect that there’s a six-week abortion ban.”
Persons: Chelsea Daniels, ” Daniels, Court's Dobbs, Octavio Jones, , Roe, Wade, it’s, , Fernand Amandi, Ron DeSantis, ” Amandi, Gov, Jeanette Nuñez, Nuñez, they're, , Lauren Brenzel, there’s, Alex Berrios Organizations: MIAMI, Getty, Democratic, Republican, Republican Florida Gov, of Health, NBC News, Physicians for Human Rights, Network, The Florida Department, State’s, Security, Department of Transportation Locations: Florida, Parenthood’s Miami, Orlando, Fla, California, Vermont, Michigan, Ohio, Miami
Germany’s flagship airline has been fined $4 million by the U.S. Department of Transportation over allegations it discriminated against a group of Jewish passengers. The regulator said Tuesday that Lufthansa had prohibited 128 people wearing traditional Orthodox Jewish clothing from boarding for a connecting flight in Germany as they made their way from New York City to Budapest, Hungary, in May 2022. “Based on the alleged misconduct of some passengers,” DOT said, Lufthansa staff “treated them all as if they were a single group and denied them boarding,” despite many of the passengers not knowing each other nor traveling together. The penalty is the largest ever issued by the DOT against an airline for a civil rights violation. But the terrible, awful irony of it coming from the German national airline was outrageous.”
Persons: Pete Buttigieg, Deborah Lipstadt, Biden, , , Lipstadt Organizations: U.S . Department of Transportation, Lufthansa, JFK, , Transportation, NBC News, American Jewish Committee, German Locations: Germany, New York City, Budapest, Hungary, ” U.S
Last month, the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates by a half point – the first time the central bank cut rates since 2020. Since the Sept. 18 meeting, the market has moved even higher, with all three major averages gaining between 1% and 3%. The bank noted that several of the companies in the screen have lagged the cyclical recovery, making the stocks likely to benefit from the market's ongoing rotation. JPMorgan rates Alaska Air overweight. Wall Street is rather bullish on the name, as 10 of the 14 analysts covering the stock have a buy or strong buy rating.
Persons: Dubravko, Bujas, E.l.f, Tarang Amin, CNBC's, Brian Niccol, Elliott Hill Organizations: JPMorgan, Federal Reserve, Federal, Fed, Alaska Air, Hawaiian Airlines, U.S . Department, Starbucks, Nike
However, weather-related events like Hurricane Helene are generally considered to be outside an airline’s control, meaning passengers have relatively few rights to compensation, experts said. Airlines make concessions in some casesSome airlines are making concessions tied to Hurricane Helene, though they vary by carrier and geography. For example, American Airlines, Delta Airlines and United Airlines have alerts about flooding in the Southeast. American Airlines is also giving leeway to passengers scheduled to travel through Augusta, Georgia, between Sept. 29 and Oct. 4. Plus, policies bought after Helene became a named storm generally won’t cover claims related to it.
Persons: Eric Napoli, Helene, Napoli, , Hurricane Helene, , Sally French, ” Napoli Organizations: North Carolina Department of Transportation, U.S . Department of Transportation, Hurricane, American Airlines, Delta Airlines, United Airlines, Valdosta ., Delta, Consumers Locations: Southeast U.S, U.S, Florida, Florida , Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Asheville , North Carolina, Georgia, Valdosta, Valdosta . United, Augusta , Georgia, Asheville
Men inspect the damage from flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on Sept. 28, 2024 in Asheville, North Carolina. Hurricane Helene made landfall Thursday in Florida as a Category 4 storm, leaving a swath of wind- and flood-related damage across Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee. Airlines make concessions in some casesDamage to a store in Valdosta, Georgia, from Hurricane Helene. Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesSome airlines are making concessions tied to Hurricane Helene, though they vary by carrier and geography. For example, American Airlines, Delta Airlines and United Airlines have alerts about flooding in the Southeast.
Persons: Hurricane Helene, Sean Rayford, Eric Napoli, Helene, Taylor, Napoli, Michael M, Sally French Organizations: Getty, North Carolina Department of Transportation, U.S . Department of Transportation, Finance, Santiago, Hurricane, American Airlines, Delta Airlines, United Airlines, Valdosta ., Delta Locations: Hurricane, Asheville , North Carolina, Southeast U.S, U.S, Florida, Florida , Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Valdosta , Georgia, Georgia, Valdosta, Valdosta . United, Augusta , Georgia, Asheville
Tom Carpenter“I saw an uptick in people traveling with their pets early in 2024,” said Heather Eisenstadt, founder of Top Dog Pet Travel, a central Florida agency specializing in pet-friendly bookings. While analysts don’t track pet travel outlays specifically, some airlines and hotels appear eager to welcome more furry guests — aware that many visitors will pay a premium for it. Some pet owners say they wouldn’t make use of it anyway. Hosts on both platforms set their own pet fees. But the 41-year-old warehouse supervisor from Allentown, Pennsylvania, sees hotel pet fees of up to $200 as reasonable.
Persons: Tom Carpenter, , Mori, Tom Carpenter’s, Tom Carpenter “, , Heather Eisenstadt, Taylor, Eisenstadt, Morgan Stanley, Simeon Gutman, they’re, “ There’s, Patrick O’Brien, “ You’re, ” “, Annette Sacks, Annette Sacks ’, ” Carpenter, Airbnb, techs, Conrad Washington, Avery Price doesn’t Organizations: , Carpenters, American Pet Products Association, American Airlines, Airlines, U.S . Department of Transportation, United, Delta Air Lines, Bark Air, Westchester County Airport, Hotels, Embassy, Conrad, Conrad Washington D.C, Tiffany, Humane Society Locations: Washington, Florida, Europe, Paris, U.S, Blairstown , New Jersey, Chihuahua, New, Westchester, Los Angeles, London, Blairstown, NJ, Hampton, Atlanta, Virginia, Allentown , Pennsylvania
Alaska Airlines completes acquisition of Hawaiian
  + stars: | 2024-09-18 | by ( ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
Alaska Airlines said on Wednesday it had completed its $1.9 billion acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines after reaching an agreement with the U.S. Department of Transportation. The airlines on Tuesday agreed to maintain key Hawaiian routes and adopt consumer protections under an agreement that will last six years. The Justice Department in August chose not to block the deal that was announced in December by Alaska, the fifth-largest domestic U.S. airline, to merge with Hawaiian, the 10th-largest carrier. Alaska CEO Ben Minicucci said in an interview that the deal would be good for competition and consumers and would expand access for consumers to both networks and give Alaska access to Hawaiian’s fleet of wide-body airplanes. Hawaiian Airlines’ stock will be de-listed and will cease trading on the Nasdaq on Wednesday, Alaska said in a statement.
Persons: Ben Minicucci, It’s, ” Minicucci, , Joe Biden Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, U.S . Department of Transportation, Justice Department, U.S, Department, JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, American, JetBlue, Alliance, The Transportation Department, Nasdaq, New York Stock Exchange Locations: Alaska, U.S, New York City, Boston, United States, Honolulu
Boeing 737-790 aircraft belonging to Alaska Airlines is seen flying at Anchorage Ted Stevens International Airport in Anchorage, Alaska, United States on July 2, 2024. Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines can go through with their planned merger, but they must maintain the value of their airline reward systems and preserve several key routes, the U.S. Department of Transportation said Tuesday. The two carriers' $1.9 billion merger agreement cleared the U.S. Justice Department's review last month. That put it in the hands of the Transportation Department, which must also review airline mergers. The Department of Transportation noted that the airlines can begin the process of closing the merger, but still need approval for a transfer application, which allows them to combine and operate international routes under one certificate.
Persons: Anchorage Ted, Department's, Transportation Pete Buttigieg Organizations: Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Anchorage, International, Hawaiian Airlines, U.S . Department of Transportation, U.S ., Transportation Department, Transportation, Department Locations: Alaska, Anchorage , Alaska, United States, U.S
U.S. passenger airlines have added nearly 194,000 jobs since 2021 as companies went on a hiring spree after spending months in a pandemic slump, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation. It’s a departure from the previous years when airlines couldn’t hire employees fast enough. U.S. airlines are usually adding pilots constantly since they are required to retire at age 65 by federal law. Then, travel demand snapped back faster than expected, climbing in earnest in 2022 and leaving airlines without experienced employees like customer service agents. “We will be hiring for the foreseeable future at levels like that,” he said at the time.
Persons: Kit Darby, they’ll, Raymond James, Savanthi, Tammy Romo, Robert Isom, , , Ken Byrnes Organizations: U.S . Department of Transportation, Airlines, Boeing, Airbus, U.S, American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, Pratt & Whitney, Frontier Airlines, Dallas, , ” United Airlines, , FedEx, UPS, American, Embry, Riddle Aeronautical University Locations: U.S, ” United
A Delta Airlines Airbus A319-114 aircraft taxis at Los Angeles International Airport after arriving from Las Vegas on May 5, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. Delta Air Lines on Thursday said last month's CrowdStrike outage and subsequent mass flight cancellations cost it some $550 million and reiterated that it is pursuing damages against the company as well as Microsoft . Delta struggled more than its competitors to recover from the July 19 outage, which took millions of Windows-based machines offline around the world. "Since the incident, our people have returned the operation to an industry-leading position that is consistent with the level of performance our customers expect from Delta." The U.S. Department of Transportation last month said it is investigating Delta's response to the outage and flight cancellations.
Persons: Ed Bastian, CrowdStrike Organizations: Delta Airlines Airbus, Los Angeles International Airport, Delta Air Lines, Microsoft, Delta, U.S . Department of Transportation Locations: Las Vegas, Los Angeles , California, Atlanta
Ironheart | Moment | Getty ImagesThe summer travel season is in full swing, often bringing more flight delays and cancellations. 'High' season for flight delays and cancellationsMid-June to the end of August typically marks "high season" for flight disruptions, Napoli said. "This summer will see more planes in the skies, frequent bad weather, and increased use of the nation's airspace," according to a Federal Aviation Administration webpage about summer travel. What Taylor Swift's The Eras Tour says about 'passion tourism'5 ways to maximize your vacation days More broadly, airline compensation policies vary for delays and cancellations. A recent spate of delays and cancellations related to a global IT outage was deemed a "controllable" event, for example.
Persons: Eric Napoli, Napoli, Hayley Berg, Biden, Taylor Organizations: Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, U.S . Department of Transportation, Consumers, Finance, Transportation, Airlines, Microsoft, Passengers, Union Locations: U.S, Europe
Travelers wait to board their delayed flight at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on July 23, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. CrowdStrike 's legal troubles from last month's massive global computer outage deepened on Monday, as the cybersecurity company was sued by air travelers whose flights were delayed or canceled. CrowdStrike said in a statement: "We believe this case lacks merit and we will vigorously defend the company." Delta faces a U.S. Department of Transportation probe into why it needed more time than rivals to recover from the outage. Monday's case is del Rio et al v CrowdStrike Inc, U.S. District Court, Western District of Texas, No.
Persons: CrowdStrike Organizations: Hartsfield, Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Southwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Austin, U.S . Department of Transportation, CrowdStrike Inc, Western District of Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Austin , Texas, Atlanta, Rio et, Western District, Western District of Texas
Ed Bastian, chief executive officer of Delta Air Lines Inc., during an interview in New York, US, on Monday, Nov. 7, 2022. Bastian said that he sees 'strong demand' for flights carrying into 2023. Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said the massive IT outage earlier this month that stranded thousands of customers will cost it $500 million. The airline canceled more than 4,000 flights in the wake of the outage, which was caused by a botched CrowdStrike software update and took thousands of Microsoft systems around the world offline. Other airlines recovered faster, and Delta's cascading disruptions and customer response sparked an investigation by the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Persons: Ed Bastian, Bastian, CNBC's Organizations: Delta Air Lines Inc, Delta Air, Microsoft, U.S . Department of Transportation Locations: New York, Paris
Airports and airlines say they can handle both. U.S. airlines expect to transport 271 million passengers worldwide this summer, up 6.3% from last season, the Airlines for America trade group has projected. Peter Steffen / picture alliance via Getty ImageThe U.S. Department of Transportation tracks “extreme weather” delays caused by conditions like tornadoes, blizzards or hurricanes but not those due to heat. During extreme heat, the airport urges employees to stay hydrated, take frequent breaks and, if they’re working outdoors, to cool off inside every hour. “Passengers are also encouraged to use the airport’s water stations to stay hydrated in the Arizona heat,” he added.
Persons: It’s, Kevin Burke, Peter Steffen, Harry Reid, , Patrick Smith, Amanda Mazzagatti, Robert Thomas, Smith, they’re, John Trierweiler, PHX Organizations: Airlines, America, Airports, Getty, U.S . Department of Transportation, London’s, Airport, Alaska Airlines, Harry, Harry Reid International, , Embry, Riddle Aeronautical University, Sky Harbor International, Aviation Locations: U.S, America, Hanover, Germany, Europe, Seattle, Portland, California , Texas, Arizona, Louisiana, Las Vegas, Vegas, Daytona Beach , Florida, Phoenix
DOT investigating Delta over IT outage chaos
  + stars: | 2024-07-23 | by ( Justine Fisher | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Delta Airlines passengers line up for agent assistance at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on July 22, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. The U.S. Department of Transportation's Office of Aviation Consumer Protection is investigating Delta Air Lines over chaos sparked by last week's global IT outage, according to a statement. The DOT cited widespread flight disruptions and customer service failures in which Delta did not uphold commitments to its passengers, it said. On Tuesday, 12% of Delta flights were canceled and 13% were delayed as of mid-morning, according to FlightAware, with some passengers still stranded in airports even days after the outage. The DOT penalized the airline $140 million, a sum 30 times larger than any previous consumer protection violations penalty from the department.
Persons: Pete Buttigieg, Ed Bastian, Rahul Samant, Bastian Organizations: Delta Airlines, Hartsfield, Jackson Atlanta International Airport, The U.S . Department of Transportation's, of Aviation, Protection, Delta Air Lines, Delta, Microsoft, Social, Southwest Airlines Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, The, Atlanta and Minneapolis
Airlines around the world experienced disruption on an unprecedented scale after a widespread global computer outage grounded planes and created chaos at airports. Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesMajor airlines like United, Delta and American Airlines grounded flights Friday morning amid a global IT outage impacting their operations, triggering delays for travelers. More from Personal Finance:Global tech outage hits financial services companies, including Charles SchwabRent a car for a road trip, or drive your own? Expedia, for example, said on social media Friday morning it was "experiencing high call volume and long wait times due to a global IT outage. The United Airlines terminal on July 19, 2024 as a global technology outage affected LAX airport in Los Angeles.
Persons: Ting Shen, Eric Napoli, Napoli, There's, John Breyault, Charles Schwab, Taylor, Biden, Breyault, Sara Rathner, Myung J, Chun Organizations: Delta Airlines, Ronald Reagan National Airport, Airlines, Bloomberg, Getty, American Airlines, U.S . Department of Transportation, National Consumers League, Finance, Global, United Airlines, Los Angeles Times, Transportation Department, Microsoft Locations: Arlington , Virginia, Delta, Los Angeles
The new issue for the global supply chain comes amid a rise in global demand, with shipments up 13% year-over-year in June. Air freight supply has increased, but only by 3% year-on-year, already causing higher costs for shippers due to the limited capacity, according to Xeneta. Thousands of flights were grounded or delayed at the world's largest air freight hubs in Europe, Asia and North America. "This is a reminder of how vulnerable our ocean and air supply chains are to IT failure." Ports, freight rails, report some issues, but normal operationsMost rails and ports were faring better after some early morning disruptions.
Persons: Buttigieg, Pete Buttigieg, van de Wouw, Niall van de Wouw, Xeneta, Berkshire Hathaway, Mario Cordero, Bethann Rooney, Emily Stausbøll, Stausbøll, Kpler, Matt Wright Organizations: U.S . Department of Transportation, Transportation, CNBC, Air, Microsoft, FedEx, UPS, Union Pacific, Pacific, CSX, Norfolk, BNSF, APM, Maersk, Port Authority, Port Authority of New, Port, U.S ., Harbour Master Locations: New York, U.S, China, Europe, Asia, North America, Norfolk Southern, Berkshire, Port, Houston, Los Angeles, of Long Beach, New Jersey, Port Authority of New York, Savannah, Virginia, Charleston Port, U.S . East Coast, Maritime, Gdansk, Dover, Felixstowe, Liverpool, Rotterdam
To evaluate each state's infrastructure, our Top States study considers not just roads, bridges, ports and airports. The state broadband office notes that it is the nation's ninth-largest allocation per capita. The state's power grid is among America's least reliable, according to U.S. Department of Energy data. The severe weather means power outages are frequent as well. Since then, the power outages have persisted, making Maine's grid among the worst in the nation.
Persons: Pete Buttigieg, Seth Martindale, Rusty, Dan Koeck, Doug Burgum, Biden, Mark Miller, Suzanne Kreiter, Jim Justice, Senators Joe Manchin, Shelley Moore Capito, Mississippi Brenda Gavin, Elnora Ross, Michael Democker, Robert Gauthier, We're, Lauren Owens Lambert, Logan —, stoplights, Brianna Soukup, Lance King Organizations: Companies, Business, CNBC, Infrastructure Law, Arkansas Turrell, Arkansas Broadband Office, Law, Arkansas Economic Development Corporation, North Dakota, Washington Post, Peace Garden State, U.S . Department of Energy, Power Company, Dakota Utilities, Montana Bison, Getty, Industrial, Rte, Boston Globe, Census, U.S . Department of Transportation, West Virginia, Gov, U.S, Senators, West Virginia Coal Association, Justice, Manchin, Virginia Economic, First Street Foundation, Hawaii, Los Angeles Times, Afp, Boston Regional Airport, Spirit Airlines, Orlando, Logan, JetBlue, White Mountain Cable, Portland Press, Portland Press Herald, Central Maine Power, Power, Energy Department, Maine Locations: States, Arkansas, Arkansas Turrell Arkansas, Turrell Arkansas, Underwood, Peace, North Dakota, Minnesota, Dakota, Buffalo, Yellowstone, Montana, Massachusetts, Canton, Bay State, Boston, Kanawha, Poca, West Virginia, Winfield, Putnam County, Mountain State, Virginia, Mississippi, Louin , Mississippi, Gulf, BroadbandNow, Lahaina , Hawaii, Maui, Lahaina, Western Maui, Hampshire, Hampton , New Hampshire, Manchester, New Hampshire, New England, Maine, Epsom , New Hampshire, Brighton, Woodford Street, Portland, Alaska, Dalton, Coldfoot , Alaska
JetBlue Airways said Wednesday that it is seeking U.S. Department of Transportation approval to pair up with British Airways so the airlines could each expand their networks. The code-sharing agreement includes 75 destinations in the United States — 39 from New York and 36 from Boston — and 17 cities in Europe. Airlines frequently turn to code-sharing agreements, which allow carries to sell seats on airline partner's flights, to grow in regions outside their network. American Airlines also has a more than decade-old joint venture with British Airways across the Atlantic that is more involved than a code-sharing agreement. JetBlue's request for an agreement with British Airways comes a year after a federal judge struck down JetBlue's partnership with American in the U.S Northeast, which sought to allow the carriers to coordinate schedules and routes.
Persons: British Airways didn't Organizations: JetBlue Airbus A321neo, AMS EHAM, JetBlue Airways, U.S, Department of, British Airways, Boston —, Airlines, American Airlines, JetBlue, United, Delta Air Lines, Paxex Aero, U.S . American, American Locations: Amsterdam, Netherlands, United States, New York, Europe, Paris, Dublin, Edinburgh, U.S
Frontier Airlines said it will stop charging customers a fee to change their flights, taking a page from larger competitors as the Biden administration issues stricter rules targeting so-called "junk fees." Frontier currently charges up to $99 to change flights if the change is made within a week of the trip, according to the airline's website. Larger rivals Delta , American and United scrapped change fees during the Covid-19 pandemic for travelers who were booked in standard economy class and above. "The truth is the big four all have no change fees on the majority of their products, so we were not as desirable," Biffle said. He said change fees were a "top complaint" of travelers.
Persons: Biden, Barry Biffle, Biffle Organizations: Frontier Airlines, CNBC, U.S . Department of Transportation, Frontier, Delta, United, Southwest Airlines
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