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New York CNN —United CEO Scott Kirby is apologizing to customers and his own employees after taking a private jet during a week when his airline was canceling thousands of flights. United customers have been plagued by flight delays, cancellations and lost luggage this week. On Friday as of the evening, United had 979 flight delays, or 34% of its operations, and 234 canceled flights, according to FlightAware. “The FAA frankly failed us this weekend,” said Kirby in an internal company memo to United staff shared with CNN on Wednesday. “Look, United Airlines has some internal issues they need to work through.
Persons: Scott Kirby, Kirby, ” Kirby, , , Pete Buttigieg, They’ve, CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Buttigieg, They’re Organizations: New, New York CNN —, Teterboro Airport, , Newark Liberty International Airport, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, United, CNN, Newark, United Airlines Locations: New York, New Jersey, Denver , Colorado, Newark , New Jersey
The AAA estimates do not include Thursday, June 29th, which the Federal Aviation Administration expects to be the busiest day of air travel during the holiday. United Airlines (UAL.O) bore the brunt of the disruptions, with about 19% of its scheduled flights canceled and about 47% delayed. The disruptions have left passengers fuming, with many United customers venting frustration on social media about long lines, delays in rebooking flights and misplaced luggage. In a staff memo, he said over 150,000 United customers were affected last weekend because of FAA staffing issues and its impact on managing traffic. American Airlines (AAL.O) expects nearly three million customers from Friday, June 30, through Tuesday, July 4, across more than 26,000 scheduled flights.
Persons: Pete Buttigieg, Buttigieg, Scott Kirby, Doyinsola Oladipo, Rajesh Kumar Singh, Deepa Babington Organizations: YORK, AAA, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Washington D.C, U.S ., United Airlines, Twitter, . Transportation, CNN, United, American Airlines, Thomson Locations: U.S, Washington, U.S . East Coast, Chicago, FlightAware, New York
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFmr. acting FAA Administrator Billy Nolen explains the reasons behind recent U.S. flight disruptionsFormer FAA Acting Administrator Billy Nolen joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the recent U.S. air traffic disruptions and how airlines and the FAA are addressing the issues, staffing shortages, and more.
Persons: Billy Nolen Organizations: FAA
CNN —Virgin Galactic, the venture founded by British billionaire Richard Branson, successfully launched its first paying customers to the edge of space — a milestone two decades in the making. (Future Virgin Galactic flights, however, are expected to include a range of high-profile customers.) Bennett’s role was to assess the comfort and function of the flight, using that information to inform future changes Virgin Galactic might make to its rocket-powered space plane, VSS Unity. Organizations such as NASA have routinely flown experiments on suborbital rockets, including Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin missions. In a tragic 2014 accident, Virgin Galactic’s space plane broke apart during flight, killing the mission’s copilot, Michael Alsbury.
Persons: Richard Branson, Virgin Galactic’s, Jeff Bezos’s, Walter Villadei, Angelo Landolfi, Colin Bennett, Pantaleone, Branson, Burt Rutan, Paul Allen, Hamish Harding, Michael Alsbury, Organizations: CNN, Virgin Galactic, Italian Air Force, Virgin, SpaceX, Italy’s National Research Council, Branson, VSS, VSS Unity, NASA, International, National Research Council, Microsoft, Galactic, OceanGate, Scaled Composites, Origin, Congress, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA Locations: British, New Mexico, United States
June 28 (Reuters) - Joby Aviation (JOBY.N) said on Wednesday the U.S. aviation regulator has given the nod for flight testing of its air taxi, as it edges towards securing approval to begin commercial operations. The California-based company also said Toyota North America's CEO, Tetsuo Ogawa, will join its board on Saturday. Joby said the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had granted a Special Airworthiness Certificate which allows flight testing of its first production prototype without passengers. The aircraft will be delivered to Edwards Air Force Base after completing initial testing, the company said. The delivery is made under Joby's $131 million contract with the U.S. Air Force.
Persons: Tetsuo Ogawa, Joby, Aishwarya Nair, Krishna CHandra Organizations: Joby Aviation, U.S, Toyota North, Toyota, Archer Aviation, Vertical Aerospace, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Edwards Air Force Base, U.S . Air Force, Thomson Locations: California, Bengaluru
[1/2] Joby Aviation founder JoeBen Bevirt poses next to a Joby Aviation Air Taxi ahead of their listing at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., August 11, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File PhotoJune 28 (Reuters) - Joby Aviation (JOBY.N) said on Wednesday the U.S. aviation regulator has given the nod for flight testing of its electric air taxi, taking it a step closer to securing approvals for commercial operations. Joby said the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had granted a Special Airworthiness Certificate, which allows flight testing of its first production prototype without passengers. Rival Archer received the green signal for flight testing in 2021. Joby's aircraft will be delivered to Edwards Air Force Base after completing initial testing, the company said.
Persons: JoeBen Bevirt, Andrew Kelly, Tetsuo Ogawa, Joby, Archer, Germany's, Aishwarya Nair, Krishna Chandra Eluri Organizations: Joby Aviation, Joby Aviation Air Taxi, New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, U.S, Toyota North, Toyota, Archer Aviation, Vertical Aerospace, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Aerospace, Edwards Air Force Base, U.S . Air Force, Thomson Locations: Manhattan , New York City, U.S, California, Joby's, Bengaluru
New York CNN —Hundreds of thousands of US airline customers were stranded this week as severe weather grounded planes and led to canceled flights. As of 8:30 am ET, FlightAware tracking service reported there were 687 flights canceled and another 1,200 delays. Although that’s better than the 2,200 canceled flights in each of the last two days, or the more than 16,000 delayed flights between Monday and Tuesday, it’s hardly a smooth-running operation. Staffing shortageThe US air travel system is unable to recover quickly from widespread weather problems, because it doesn’t have the bodies to deal with the disruptions. The airline canceled 461 flights this past Saturday and Sunday and delayed another 1,972 flights, according to data from flight tracking site FlightAware.
Persons: that’s, it’s, Ed Bastian, , Scott Kirby, Kirby, ” Kirby, United, , Paul Thacker, ” Thacker, “ ”, ” Michelle Maciel, Pete Muntean, Gregory Wallace Organizations: New, New York CNN, Federal Aviation, Airport, Transportation, Administration, FAA, Newark Airport, United, United Airlines, CNN, Newark Liberty International Airport, Association of Flight, DC, Greyhound Locations: New York, Boston, New York City, Madrid, United’s, Newark, Toronto, Denver, Portland Oregon
Passengers stranded in Newark airport resorted to sleeping on tables and luggage carts. The airport has seen hundreds of flights canceled and delayed because of a storm. Passengers stranded in Newark airport resorted to sleeping on tables and luggage carts after flights were canceled over the weekend, CBS News reported. One passenger told the news outlet: "We've slept on a little bit of everything. Representatives for Newark Airport did not immediately return Insider's request for comment, made outside normal working hours.
Persons: We've, I've, we're, Margo Osborne, Osborne Organizations: Passengers, CBS News, Newark Airport, United Airlines, Twitter, FAA Locations: Newark, New York, New Orleans
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Persons: Dow Jones
Flight disruptions mounted Tuesday as severe storms and staffing issues kicked off a rocky start to summer. Some airline executives have also blamed some of the disruptions on shortages of air traffic controllers. "And that put everyone behind the eight ball when weather actually did hit on Sunday and was further compounded by FAA staffing shortages Sunday evening." The Covid-19 pandemic derailed hiring and training of new air traffic controllers, and the agency is now trying to catch up. The Department of Transportation's Office of Inspector General said in a report last week that air traffic control staffing shortfalls put air traffic operations at risk.
Persons: Biden, Scott Kirby, Kirby, General, Don Uselmann Organizations: Newark Liberty International Airport, Transportation Security Administration, United Airlines, FAA, Newark Liberty International, CNBC, Transportation's, reassignments, The Association of Flight, CWA, Union, JetBlue Airways, JetBlue Locations: New Jersey, United States, U.S, New York
United Airlines was once again faring the worst of the American domestic airlines. Republic Airways, which operates short-haul flights for American Airlines, Delta and United, had 17% of its schedule canceled (153 flights) but few delays. More than 40 million people in the Northeast and Central Plains are at risk of severe storms on Tuesday. United CEO blames FAA staffing for “unprecedented” weekend delaysTuesday’s travel troubles are the fourth day in the row of delays and cancellations. The airline canceled 461 flights this past Saturday and Sunday and delayed another 1,972 flights, according to data from flight tracking site FlightAware.
Persons: that’s, John F, Kennedy, Boston’s Logan, , , Scott Kirby, Kirby, ” Kirby, Department of Transportation “, it’s Organizations: New, New York CNN, United Airlines, Republic Airways, American Airlines, Jersey’s Newark Liberty, Storm Prediction, United, Federal Aviation Administration, CNN, FAA, Newark Liberty International Airport, Department of Transportation Locations: New York, United States, Delta, United, LaGuardia, Northeast, Central Plains, Philadelphia, Washington, DC, Kansas, Oklahoma, Wichita, Tulsa, New York , Delaware, Pennsylvania
All told, at least a third of the US population is currently grappling with costly extreme weather events. In 2022, extreme weather events cost the United States about $165 billion, according to the NOAA. Sector by sector: Extreme weather impacts the economy writ large, but certain sectors tend to suffer more than others. Agriculture, construction, tourism and renewable energy sectors also tend to feel the brunt of extreme weather events. “We’re really poorly adapted to the extreme weather and climate that we have right now,” said Mankin.
Persons: New York CNN — We’ve, , Justin Mankin, Nam, we’ve, Andrew Watterson, Ian, “ We’re, Mark Thompson, it’s, , Vladimir Putin, Brent, That’s Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Dartmouth College, Sunday, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, NOAA, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Travelers, Southwest Airlines, O'Hare International, Agriculture, Rystad Energy, Western, Federal Reserve Bank of New, Consumer Locations: New York, Texas, United States, Chicago, Florida, Russia, China, India, Russian, Moscow, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
June 27 (Reuters) - United Airlines (UAL.O) Chief Executive Scott Kirby has blamed the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) after severe storms led to thousands of canceled flights in recent days. "I'm ... frustrated that the FAA frankly failed us this weekend," he said in a memo to the company's employees on Monday. "We estimate that over 150,000 customers on United alone were impacted this weekend because of FAA staffing issues and their ability to manage traffic," Kirby said in a memo reviewed by Reuters. Kirby said that the FAA reduced arrival rates by 40% and departure rates by 75% on Saturday. That, he said, led to massive delays, cancellations and "put everyone behind the eight ball when weather actually did hit on Sunday and was further compounded by FAA staffing shortages Sunday evening."
Persons: Scott Kirby, Kirby, Jaiveer Singh, David Shepardson, Maju Samuel Organizations: United Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Reuters, U.S ., Thomson Locations: U.S . East Coast, Washington, New York, United States, Bengaluru
ET, the FAA issued ground stops for Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and Dulles International Airport, preventing aircraft from taking off for those destinations. "Departures to D.C.-area airports have resumed and repairs to the communications power panel are complete," the FAA said in a statement. More than 440 flights to and from Newark Liberty International Airport were delayed. The airport is a major hub of United Airlines , which had more than 840 delayed flights Sunday, according to FlightAware. American Airlines posted 938 delayed flights, 27% of its mainline schedule, Delta Air Lines had 716, or 20% of its schedule, and New York-based JetBlue Airways had 472 delays, or 45% of its planned schedule.
Persons: Ronald Reagan Organizations: Boeing, Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Federal Aviation Administration, Washington D.C, FAA, Baltimore, Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, Dulles International, Washington Dulles, Newark Liberty International Airport, United Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue Airways Locations: Ronald Reagan Washington, Arlington , Virginia, Canada, U.S, Washington, Miami, Boston, Detroit, United, New York
CNN —As millions of Americans are expected to pack commercial flights over the July 4th holiday, the union representing the Federal Aviation Administration’s air traffic controllers says a recent government watchdog report is proof the agency and Congress must fix a “flawed staffing model.”“The status quo is no longer sustainable,” said Rich Santa, head of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association. The union says that Congress must “require FAA to immediately implement” new staffing standards and “conduct maximum hiring.”“There are currently 1,200 fewer fully certified controllers today compared to ten years ago,” said Santa. “FAA’s flawed staffing model and inconsistent hiring has resulted in new hires not keeping pace with attrition over the past decade.”Previous CNN reporting found that staffing issues at one key air traffic control facility in Florida triggered thousands of delayed flights over a seven-week period last summer and revealed a complaint that workers were pressured to work overtime to provide coverage. The union of controllers says the FAA should make changes “without the need for congressional intervention and Congress should not require further study of the issue.”The FAA says it has “completed a comprehensive review of the distribution of controllers” and that it is using a new system to track ATC work assignments. The agency is calling on Congress to fund hiring 1,800 controllers next year in addition to the 1,500 the agency is funded to hire this year.
Persons: , Rich Santa, Organizations: CNN, Federal Aviation, National Air Traffic Controllers Association, FAA, Department of Transportation’s Locations: Florida
June 25 (Reuters) - Thunderstorms and failing equipment at an FAA facility created significant delays for air travelers across the U.S. East Coast on Sunday evening as Washington and New York were forced to briefly halt most incoming flights. As the evening progressed, flights resumed from the Washington area after repairs to communications were completed, the Federal Aviation Administration said. But delays continued for several New York are airports after thunderstorms had earlier forced ground stops. The FAA had cited thunderstorms for ground stops at Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta airport, Philadelphia airport, Newark's Liberty airport and New York's JFK and LaGuardia airports. FlightAware, a flight tracking website, said 39% of departing flights from Newark Liberty and 47% of flights leaving LaGuardia airports were delayed.
Persons: Hartsfield –, David Shepardson, Costas Pitas, Diane Craft, Lisa Shumaker Organizations: FAA, U.S ., Federal Aviation Administration, Hartsfield, JFK, Newark Liberty, Reuters, Thomson Locations: U.S . East Coast, Washington, New York, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Liberty, New, LaGuardia, Los Angeles
WASHINGTON, June 23 (Reuters) - Critical U.S. air traffic control (ATC) facilities face staffing challenges and the Federal Aviation Administration "lacks a plan to address them," a government audit released on Friday found. The Transportation Department Office of Inspector General said the staffing issues pose risks to the continuity of air traffic operations. The report said the FAA has made limited efforts to ensure adequate controller staffing at the busiest air traffic control facilities, adding that 77% of critical ATC facilities are staffed below the FAA's 85% threshold. The center in busy Florida has had 300 staffing triggers - events when workforce issues require reducing air traffic, the report said. The Transportation Department in May sought $117 million to hire 1,800 air traffic controllers next year, in addition to 1,500 being hired this year.
Persons: General, York TRACON, David Shepardson, Chizu Nomiyama, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Federal Aviation Administration, Transportation Department, FAA, National, Jacksonville, The Transportation Department, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Washington National, New, ., Thomson Locations: U.S, Florida, New York JFK, LaGuardia, Newark, New York, York, Miami, Washington
WASHINGTON, June 23 (Reuters) - Critical U.S. air traffic control (ATC) facilities face staffing challenges and the Federal Aviation Administration "lacks a plan to address them," a government audit released on Friday found. The Transportation Department Office of Inspector General said the staffing issues pose risks to the continuity of air traffic operations. The report said the FAA has made limited efforts to ensure adequate controller staffing at the busiest air traffic control facilities, adding that 77% of critical ATC facilities are staffed below the FAA's 85% threshold. The center in busy Florida has had 300 staffing triggers - events when workforce issues require reducing air traffic, the report said. The Transportation Department in May sought $117 million to hire 1,800 air traffic controllers next year, in addition to 1,500 being hired this year.
Persons: General, York TRACON, David Shepardson, Chizu Nomiyama, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Federal Aviation Administration, Transportation Department, FAA, National, Jacksonville, The Transportation Department, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Washington National, New, ., Thomson Locations: U.S, Florida, New York JFK, LaGuardia, Newark, New York, York, Miami, Washington
Last year, Verizon VZ.N and AT&T T.N voluntarily agreed to delay some C-Band 5G usage until July as air carriers worked to retrofit airplane altimeters. Delta Air Lines (DAL.N) said Friday its supplier told the airline it would not have enough radio altimeters for Delta’s entire fleet by July 1. Approximately 190 Delta narrowbody aircraft are not yet equipped with updated radio altimeters including all A220s, most A319s and A320s, and some A321s. All Delta widebody aircraft will be equipped with updated radio altimeters prior to July 1, the airline said. Reuters first reported in March that major U.S. wireless carriers agreed to some voluntary actions to address aviation safety concerns.
Persons: Robert Bryan, Read, Pete Buttigieg, Buttigieg, T.N, David Shepardson, Chizu Organizations: Eagle Aviation, Columbia Metro, . Transportation, Airlines for, Verizon, Carriers, Air Lines, Delta, Reuters, Mobile, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Thomson Locations: West Columbia, South Carolina, U.S, WASHINGTON, Airlines for America
But for those willing to shell out, tourism and research company OceanGate Expeditions offered eight-day missions that allow customers to explore the Titanic more than 13,000 feet below the ocean’s surface using five-seat carbon fiber and titanium underwater vessels. OceanGate launched successful expeditions to the Titanic wreckage in 2021 and 2022. Geoffrey Kent, the founder of luxury travel company Abercrombie & Kent, has recently planned trips for clients including race car driving on ice in Finland and orangutan trekking in Borneo. OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush has also repeatedly claimed that existing submersible regulations needlessly prioritize passenger safety over commercial innovation. But it also hasn’t innovated or grown—because they have all these regulations,” Rush said in an interview that appeared in a June 2019 issue of Smithsonian Magazine.
Persons: , , Nick D’Annunzio, TARA, OceanGate, Stockton Rush, Andrea Doria, Bill Sikes, Rush, Knight Frank, , Gideon Kimbrell, Everest’s, Richard Branson, Jeff Bezos, Geoffrey Kent, Sal Mercogliano, hasn’t, It’s, ” Rush, David Pogue, don’t, “ Don’t, ” It’s, D’Annunzio, Ann Epting, Epting, Brad Lendon, Parija Kavilanz Organizations: CNN, OceanGate Expeditions, US Coast Guard, Expeditions, Stockton Rush, Rescuers, OceanGate Foundation, Virgin Galactic, Virgin, VSS Unity, Origin, Elon Musk’s SpaceX, Abercrombie, Kent, Campbell University, Smithsonian Magazine, CBS, Federal Aviation Administration, SpaceX, FAA, Kent’s, Abercrombie & Kent Locations: Everett , Washington, Boston, Stockton, Finland, Borneo, North Carolina, Oman
Last December, it decided to make its own engine after engine manufacturers refused to help. Now its Symphony engine will be made with the help of FTT, GE Additive, and StandardAero. Sustainable aviation fuel is made from sources like cooking oil and waste, and can reduce carbon emissions by up to 80% compared to traditional jet fuel. The company is aiming to be net zero by 2025, and Scholl said using sustainable aviation fuel is key to this. Boom's Symphony engine.
Persons: , Blake Scholl, Scholl, Pete Syme, Boom, Royce Organizations: Supersonic, GE, Morning, Paris Air, SAF, FAA, United Airlines, American Airlines Locations: New York, London, Florida
A United plane's wing struck a stationary Delta plane at Boston Logan International Airport on Friday. A video filmed by a passenger shows the United plane clipped the Delta plane's tail while taxiing. A passenger on the Delta plane told CNN it "felt like a brief earthquake." A United spokesperson told Insider that the the winglet of a United aircraft clipped the tail of another aircraft at the airport. Alex Wilson, a passenger on the Delta plane, told CNN that it "felt like a brief earthquake" when the plane was clipped.
Persons: Boston Logan International Airport, Alex Wilson, hadn't, Wilson Organizations: Boston Logan International, CNN, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United, Aviation, Delta, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Boeing, Airbus, The United Locations: Boston, Newark, Detroit
That’s right: compact, portable and potentially snatching your perfect vacation from the jaws of lost luggage disaster, the travel accessory of the moment is the humble luggage tracker. “There remain significant problems with lost luggage this year, and this is likely to be worse still in the peak travel period this summer. Possibly because he was one of many: “At one point the agent I was emailing with told me that the building had thousands of lost bags,” he said. Elliot SharodElliot Sharod was one of the first to go viral for tracking his lost luggage through its AirTag. Both Lufthansa and Air New Zealand seemingly banned bag trackers in the hold last year – before swiftly reversing the ban in both cases.
Persons: ” Thomas Romig, Rory Boland, That’s, you’ve, Kate Bevan, it’s, you’ll, you’re, , Boland, Jai Rawat, Jai Rawat Jai Rawat, , , Virgin, – Rawat, he’d, Rawat, James D, Morgan, Emily McNutt, ” Boland, ’ Elliot Sharod's, Elliot Sharod Elliot Sharod, Sharod, they’re, Bevan, Andrew Kelly, SITA, David Lavorel, Jonas Walzberg, It’s, Boland – Organizations: CNN, Airports, International, SITA, Virgin Atlantic, London Heathrow, Heathrow, Rawat, ‘ Airlines, Samsung Galaxy, “ Passengers, Aer Lingus, Google, Samsung, Apple, Lufthansa, Air New, FAA, Airlines, Reuters, Delta, Twitter, Locations: , London, San Francisco, California, South Africa, Air New Zealand
Following the policy announcement, Fed Chair Jerome Powell noted that rate hikes typically filter through the economy with “uncertain lags.” In other words, the Fed has been playing an (educated) guessing game, taking action before it understands the results. What’s happening: As much as Federal Reserve officials wish they could, they can’t just wave a wand and lower inflation rates. Here’s how the system works: First, the Fed raises interest rates for overnight loans between financial institutions. Less demand for goods reduces incentives to raise prices and inflation rates will fall. That means they’re able to draw their own conclusions about the trajectory of inflation rates.
Persons: Jerome Powell, , Jack McIntyre, McIntyre, ” Powell, Powell, Yung, Yu Ma, Ma, Biden, Joe Biden, Sam Fossum, you’re, ” Biden, Lael Brainard, Greg Wallace, Sen, John Thune of, Republican Sen, Jerry Moran Organizations: New, New York CNN, Federal Reserve, Brandywine Global, BMO Wealth Management, Ticketmaster, , Economic, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Republican Locations: New York, , John Thune of South Dakota, Kansas
CNN —A series of controversial proposals to address the airline pilot shortage is complicating Congress’ consideration of a new slate of Federal Aviation Administration policies with one senator warning fellow lawmakers there will be blood on their hands if reduced pilot training causes a fatal accident. The measures presented by lawmakers include raising the pilot retirement age, allowing more training to occur in a flight simulator rather than aircraft cockpit, and fast-tracking training programs. The measures are hotly contested and are aimed at addressing a shortage in airline pilots that was exacerbated by the pandemic. The Illinois Democrat scolded those who feel simulator training will be equivalent and said she didn’t believe reducing training hours would solve the shortage. On the House side, the House Transportation Committee narrowly approved an amendment that would raise the mandatory pilot retirement age by two years to 67.
Persons: Sen, John Thune of, Republican Sen, Jerry Moran, , , Jason Ambrosi, Tammy Duckworth, Troy Nehls, ” Nehls, You’re, Rick Larsen, Nehls Organizations: CNN, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Republican, Senate, Air Line Pilots Association union, Illinois Democrat, Transportation, Texas Republican, AARP, Regional Airline Association, United, Locations: John Thune of South Dakota, Kansas, Iraq, Illinois, Texas, American, Delta
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