SF Gate: Cash-strapped airline to issue only e-tickets for domestic travel

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Friday, May 2, 2003 (AP)
Cash-strapped airline to issue only e-tickets for domestic travel



   (05-02) 08:20 PDT DALLAS (AP) --
   Stiff fees by American Airlines Inc. for passengers using paper tickets
are designed to eliminate what has become a costly system in favor of
electronic ticketing, officials say.
   The cash-strapped airline will charge $50 for a paper ticket starting
immediately, up from $25. Officials say the higher fee is designed to
"increase the incentive" to use e-tickets.
   "Eliminating paper transactions is a fundamental part of our efforts to
enhance the customer experience with technology that makes air travel
simple and hassle-free," Andrew Watson, American vice president of
e-business said Thursday.
   "With the elimination of paper tickets comes even greater cost savings a=
nd
productivity for the airline," Watson said.
   The world's largest air carrier, which averted bankruptcy late last month
when key unions agreed to economic givebacks, said Thursday it will issue
only electronic ticket versions for domestic travel and soon will do the
same for international flights.
   The airline lost $1.04 billion in the first quarter and was in the final
steps of cutting $4 billion a year from its costs. Airline officials
declined to specify how much it would save from dropping paper tickets,
saying only that the savings would be "substantial." But it's a move being
followed by other major airlines hoping to cut costs.
   Now, 84 percent of American's passengers fly using electronic tickets, up
from 65 percent only one year ago.
   The airline plans to eliminate nearly all paper ticket transactions by
year's end, although passengers will still be able to get them through a
travel agent for a fee.
   American aims to have e-ticket-only travel for international trips with
its partner airlines by early 2004, and the airline has pushed back a 100
percent paperless ticketing goal to the end of 2004 from the end of this
year.

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Copyright 2003 AP

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