SFGate: Report: U.S. develops flight-reduction agreement for O'Hare

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Wednesday, August 18, 2004 (AP)
Report: U.S. develops flight-reduction agreement for O'Hare



   (08-18) 05:23 PDT CHICAGO (AP) --
   The U.S. Department of Transportation has developed a temporary
flight-reduction agreement for O'Hare International Airport, according to
a published report.
   Officials from the Federal Aviation Administration and the airlines
declined to comment on the deal, but a federal official said the plan will
be "proportionate and equitable" to all of the airport's carriers, the
Chicago Tribune reported in Wednesday's editions.
   Sixteen airlines participated in three days of negotiations in Washington
earlier this month held by the FAA. Agency officials have been trying to
ease persistent delays at O'Hare that they say hamper the nation's entire
air system.
   Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta had said the meeting was the last
opportunity for airlines to voluntarily solve O'Hare's gridlock before the
government would impose strict flight caps.
   United Airlines and American Airlines, which handle 88 percent of all
flights at the Chicago airport, had offered to support temporary flight
caps, but they wanted other carriers also to make schedule cuts, according
to documents released Monday.
   Officials from United and American did not immediately return phone calls
from The Associated Press. An FAA spokeswoman said she could not confirm
the plan.
   In January, Mineta, American and United announced a voluntary reduction =
in
daily flight schedules by 5 percent between 1 p.m. and 8 p.m., the peak
time for departures and arrivals.
   The airport continued to rank at the bottom nationally in on-time
performance, forcing an extra 2 1/2 percent reduction, which took effect
in June. The total came to about 90 fewer flights a day for the two
airlines.
   About two-thirds of arrivals at O'Hare have been on-time this year,
compared with the 82 percent systemwide goal the FAA sets.

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Copyright 2004 AP

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