SFGate: Airline executives warned to ease flight delays at O'Hare in Chicago

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Wednesday, August 4, 2004 (AP)
Airline executives warned to ease flight delays at O'Hare in Chicago
LESLIE MILLER, Associated Press Writer


   (08-04) 08:48 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --
   The head of the Federal Aviation Administration told airline executives
Wednesday that if they won't voluntarily reduce flight schedules at
Chicago's congested O'Hare International Airport, the government will do
it for them.
   "We cannot let schedules at O'Hare hold the whole system hostage," FAA
Administrator Marion Blakey told the executives. "You can't control the
weather, but you can control your schedule."
   Flight delays have reached historic levels at O'Hare, and representatives
of every major airline convened here Wednesday to talk about the problem.
   On-time arrivals at O'Hare this year are lower than for the past four
years. Only 67 percent of flights arrive there on-time. The FAA tries to
achieve a systemwide on-time performance of 82 percent.
   "If it weren't for O'Hare, we'd be making that goal," Blakey said.
   Thirty-seven percent of the delays are greater than one hour.
   Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta said officials cannot allow
congestion at O'Hare to become a chokepoint for the air transportation
system.
   "We are going to do something about this problem right here and now," he
said. Mineta said there had been 58,600 delays at O'Hare over the last six
months, more than the full-year totals for 2000, 2001 and 2002.
   Every minute that a passenger waits takes $30 from an airline's bottom
line, officials have estimated.
   United and American airlines agreed with a government order in January to
reduce their O'Hare operations by 5 percent, or 62 flights, during the
afternoon and early evening hours. In June they agreed to further reduce
their operations by 2.5 percent, but other carriers increased the number
of flights into O'Hare.
   Mineta said delays at O'Hare have cost airlines $120 million. He said
officials do not yet have a set formula in mind for schedule reductions,
but that he figured they have about a week to come up with a solution.
   Mineta also said he believes airlines will try to retain their
high-revenue passengers or will replace regional jets with larger
airliners and said that they're looking for schedule reductions beginning
in November and lasting for six months.

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Copyright 2004 AP

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