Airline touting on-time record

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Airline touting on-time record
US Airways' claims on N.Y.-Boston-D.C. market hit by rivals
By Matthew Brelis, Globe Staff, 2/26/2003
eeking to derail Amtrak's increasing market share in the Northeast
Corridor and to ground upstart American Eagle, US Airways today will
start touting what it says is a superior on-time arrival record.

''There is no more competitive set of routes in the country than the
LaGuardia-Boston-Washington triangle,'' said Stephen Usery, vice
president of marketing and revenue management.
Shuttle service between the three cities has, historically, been highly
profitable for the airlines. A one-way, walk-up fare to New York from
Boston can cost as much as a discounted ticket to London.
US Airways yesterday said it will get the word out to travel agents and
corporate clients, and post the shuttle's reliability record at airport
ticket counters and gates. Usery said ''a team of workers'' monitored
the daily performance of the US Airways Shuttle and its competitors by
tracking flights on company websites. Amtrak trains were monitored, as
well.
>From the start of the year through last Wednesday, US Airways and Delta
shuttles ''were neck and neck,'' he said, with 85 percent and 86 percent
of on-time arrivals of flights, respectively.
On the Boston-New York shuttle only, Delta had an on-time record of 86
percent; US Airways scored 84 percent.
(A flight is considered on time if it arrives within 15 minutes of the
scheduled arrival.)
''American Eagle is running around 65 percent on time, and Amtrak is
about 65 percent,'' Usery said.
Dan Stessel, a spokesman for Amtrak, said US Airways needs to
double-check its math. ''Our own on-time for the Northeast Corridor from
Oct. 1 through [yesterday] morning is 80 percent,'' he said.
(The railroad considers a train on time if it arrives within 10 minutes
of its scheduled arrival.)
''Eighty percent is not where we want to be; we want it to be 90 percent
or 95 percent -- and we are working diligently to improve, but we still
feel 80 percent is a good number.''
American Eagle spokeswoman Lisa Bailey questioned US Airways'
methodology. ''It is not very scientific; they can miss a flight or two
and that could skew the results,'' she said.
US Airways spokeswoman Amy Kudwa said the airline's analysis used
figures from competitors' websites. ''This is data that they report
publicly themselves. It was every weekday flight.''
For years, Delta and US Airways have battled to dominate the shuttle
market. In late 2000, Amtrak introduced the first of its high-speed
Acela trains, which travel between Boston and Washington. The fastest
Acela train is scheduled to take three hours and 25 minutes to reach
Pennsylvania Station in New York from Boston.
The competition got fiercer in October, when American Airlines started
nearly hourly service, using American Eagle regional jets to fly between
Logan International Airport in Boston and LaGuardia Airport in New York.
''One of the things we had been looking at was operational reliability,
because that is front and foremost for passengers,'' Usery said. ''Many
if not most of the shuttle passengers are doing day trips, and timing is
critical to get where they are going and to get back home again.''
Usery said US Airways wanted to know where it stood and if it needed to
improve. ''It turns out we are outperforming the competition,'' he said.
One area where Amtrak beat the airlines, according to US Airways, was in
number of trips canceled.
The railroad canceled 2 percent of its trips, US Airways and Delta
canceled between 5 and 6 percent, and American canceled about 8 percent,
according to the US Airways study.
''The first thing that comes to my mind is how reliable we were last
week at this time during the blizzard,'' said Amtrak's Stessel, noting
that the railroad completed its runs, while the airlines were shut down.
Delta officials had no comment.
Stessel said the airlines see Acela as a threat. Amtrak data from April
through June indicate the railroad has 53 percent of the New
York-Washington market, and 37 percent of the Boston-New York market --
or more than any single airline has. Acela has nearly a quarter of the
Boston-Philadelphia market, he said.

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