SF Gate: ValuJet, now called AirTran, makes a stunning recovery seven years after Everglades crash

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Tuesday, August 26, 2003 (AP)
ValuJet, now called AirTran, makes a stunning recovery seven years after Ev=
erglades crash
MIKE SCHNEIDER, AP Business Writer


   (08-26) 12:21 PDT ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) --
   The crash of a DC-9 into the Everglades in May 1996 that killed all 110
people aboard made an industry pariah of the low-fare airline ValuJet.
   A little more than seven years later, the airline -- under a new name,
AirTran Airways -- has made a stunning recovery.
   So far in 2003, AirTran has started offering cross-country service,
announced a $5 billion aircraft order and reported its fifth consecutive
quarterly profit at a time when financial fortunes are sagging for many
major airlines.
   "Six years ago, you had old planes, poor service, weak management," said
Ray Neidl, an airline analyst with Blaylock & Partners in New York.
"Everything has completely changed."
   The turnaround is unprecedented in recent commercial airline history, sa=
id
Alan Bender, a professor of airline economics at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University in Daytona Beach.
   Other airlines have sunk under the weight of fatal crashes. Air Florida
folded in the late 1980s, just a few years after the 1982 crash of Flight
90 into a Washington bridge, killing 78 people.
   ValuJet appeared headed in the same direction.
   Investigators blamed the crash on a cargo-hold fire started by oxygen
canisters that ValuJet's repair contractor, SabreTech Corp., improperly
packaged as cargo. The airline was vilified, temporarily grounded and its
maintenance contractor was convicted of criminal charges. Eight of the
nine counts were later thrown out on appeal, but it marked the first time
an aviation company was prosecuted in response to a U.S. air disaster.
Insurers for the companies ended up paying the families of victims tens of
millions.
   "I would bet significant money that they wouldn't have made it without t=
he
name change," Bender said. "That was a stroke of genius because they
couldn't have been perceived by the public as more of a pariah than they
were."
   The road to rehabilitation began in 1997 when ValuJet acquired AirTran,
dumped its cartoon critter logo and moved its headquarters to Orlando from
Atlanta. Next came a management shakeup in 1999 that brought a new team of
executives headed by Joe Leonard, who was chief operating officer for
now-defunct Eastern Air Lines. Only one member of AirTran's current
14-member leadership team worked for ValuJet at the time of the crash.
   No factor, Leonard said, has been more important to the company's
turnaround than retiring the airline's aging DC-9s and bringing in new,
roomier Boeing 717s for short to medium hauls. The last DC-9s will be
retired from AirTran's fleet later this year. The airline last month
placed an order for 50 new Boeing 737s and an option for 50 more and
ordered up to 10 Boeing 717s.
   Industry experts said the new planes have dramatically improved AirTran's
safety record. "Now you look at the airline and it's one of the most
modern fleets in the world," said John Wensveen, a professor of airline
management at Embry-Riddle.
   The airline, which began flying this year to Denver, Las Vegas and Los
Angeles, will add Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and San
Francisco to its schedule later in the year. AirTran officials say they
plan to expand into new markets, most likely the West Coast and Midwest.
   AirTran now offers 492 flights a day to 43 cities, but will grow even
faster with plans to open service in three to five new cities each year.
   "We can put airplanes anywhere," said Leonard, AirTran's chairman and
chief executive. "We'll keep pushing our web out further and further."
   Most low-fare airlines try to distinguish themselves with more than cheap
tickets. JetBlue has onboard TV and leather seats. Southwest has an
irreverent sense of humor with its shorts-clad crew singing silly jingles.
The old ValuJet had a cartoon critter logo that adorned its aircraft.
   AirTran does not have any such distinguishing features, Bender said.
   "I haven't been able to figure out in the case of AirTran what their
gimmick is," he said. "I scratch my head at what makes AirTran special."
   AirTran also has been helped in the past two years by changes in the
commercial aviation industry after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Cost-conscious business travelers have gravitated toward the low-cost
airlines, and AirTran has made a special effort to promote its business
class.
   AirTran has been one of the few airlines to remain profitable during the
slump in commercial flying, and in June it had a monthly haul of 1 million
passengers for the first time. AirTran reported a second-quarter net
income of $57.2 million on $233 million revenue, compared with $5 million
in net income on $190 million revenue in the second quarter of last year.
   The company's bottom line was helped by a $38.1 million cash reimburseme=
nt
from the federal government given to all airlines to blunt the effects of
the war in Iraq on air travel. Without the reimbursement, AirTran's
profits for the quarter would have been $21.9 million.
   Many travelers do not associate AirTran with its predecessor.
   Mark Wolsonovich, who regularly flies on AirTran from Orlando to Chicago
or Akron, Ohio, because he can save as much as $50 a ticket, had no idea
that the airline used to be known as ValuJet.
   "To me, that's one of those flukes," Wolsonovich said of the 1996 crash,
while waiting for a flight from Orlando to Chicago. "Things like that
happen."

On the Net:
   AirTran Airways: www.airtran.com

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Copyright 2003 AP

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