SF Gate: FAA announces new steps to reduce airline delays

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Friday, May 24, 2002 (AP)
FAA announces new steps to reduce airline delays
JONATHAN D. SALANT, Associated Press Writer


   (05-24) 12:02 PDT HERNDON, Va. (AP) --
   The Federal Aviation Administration marked the beginning of the summer
travel season with new steps to reduce airline delays.
   FAA Administrator Jane Garvey came to the nation's air traffic control
center here Friday to outline the agency's latest efforts to make the
planes fly on time, from new air routes to more frequent weather updates.
   "If the weather cooperates, travelers should arrive at their destinations
on time," Garvey said, speaking on the day before the Memorial Day
weekend, the traditional kickoff of the summer travel season.
   Garvey said there were no specific terrorist threats against U.S.
airlines. She reminded passengers that they needed to get to airports
earlier than in the past because of new airline security measures imposed
following the terrorist attacks.
   "The heightened security measures mean it will take a little longer to g=
et
through the airport," Garvey said.
   Once the planes are aloft, they can take advantage of new routes through
Canadian air space, through areas formerly reserved for the military, and
over the Atlantic Ocean for north-south East Coast flights, such as Boston
to Miami.
   The extra paths will allow airplanes to fly around thunderstorms, rather
than have to be held on the ground at airports.
   "Some weather is just plain unsafe," Garvey said. "But we can manage
severe weather operations better."
   There are also new routes to help reduce congestion in the New
York-Washington-Chicago triangle.
   In addition, the FAA plans to provide airlines and controllers with
updated weather reports every two hours rather than every four hours,
allowing them to react quicker to storms, Garvey said.
   And new technology allows FAA officials to more accurately project the
paths and intensity of thunderstorms, meaning controllers can more quickly
allow planes to take off and land rather than delay them to wait to see
where the storm is headed, said Jack Kies, an FAA program director.
   While there are still fewer passengers flying this year as compared with
the same period in 2001, the number of flights is close to pre-Sept. 11
levels, Garvey said. At such major airports as Chicago O'Hare, Dallas-Fort
Worth and Atlanta, the number of flights at certain times is even greater
than last year, she said.
   Indeed, Kies said he expected more passengers to fly this summer than la=
st
year. In March, the FAA's annual forecast projected that air travel
wouldn't return to pre-Sept. 11 levels until 2003.
   The AAA, meanwhile, expects 4.1 million airline passengers over the
Memorial Day weekend, down 7 percent from the 4.4 million who flew in
2001. And the Air Transport Association reported that 43.7 million
passengers flew the major U.S. airlines last month, down 13 percent from
50.3 million in April 2001.

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Copyright 2002 AP

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