SFGate: American Proposes Chicago-Beijing Route

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



=20
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/n/a/2006/12/08/financial/=
f160010S78.DTL
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Saturday, December 9, 2006 (AP)
American Proposes Chicago-Beijing Route
By DAVID KOENIG, AP Business Writer


   (12-09) 23:01 PST DALLAS, (AP) --

   American Airlines is tinkering with its bid for new service to China,
proposing that flights from Dallas stop in Chicago en route to Beijing, to
get around objections from pilots. The airline said Friday it has asked to
amend its plan now pending before the U.S. Transportation Department.

   Return flights would operate directly from Beijing to Dallas because tail
winds reduce their time, the airline said.

   American, the nation's largest airline, and three other carriers submitt=
ed
proposals in October for seven new weekly round-trip slots between the
United States and China.

   American said it was changing is proposal because nonstop Dallas-Beijing
westbound flights are 15 minutes longer than allowed under the airline's
contract with its pilots. The company and the pilots' union have failed to
reach a side deal that would allow longer flights to China.

   The Chicago-Beijing leg would squeeze in under the current rules. Americ=
an
would change crews in Chicago to comply with limits on pilots' work days,
spokesman Charley Wilson said.

   For passengers who board in Dallas, however, the flight to Chicago and a
stopover at O'Hare Airport would add about four hours to their trip.

   Wilson said the change in the company's proposal was unprecedented in the
airline industry. He said American didn't know how it would affect its
chances of winning the route.

   Officials with the Allied Pilots Association didn't return calls for
comment, but the union issued a statement supporting the changed proposal.
"Expanding American Airlines' international reach is in the long-term best
interests of our airline, its employees and our passengers," the union
said.

   Last month, the union conditioned its support on concessions including p=
ay
for canceled flights. The company answered that the union request should
be part of regular contract negotiations, which are likely to last into
2008.

   American had based its proposal on becoming the first airline to serve
China from a Southern state. The mayors of Dallas and Fort Worth and
officials at DFW Airport said they supported the stopover in Chicago,
saying the service would still benefit Texas and other states.

   United plans to fly from Washington to Beijing, Northwest wants to add
service from Detroit to Shanghai, and Houston-based Continental proposes
to fly from Newark, N.J., to Shanghai.

   Michael Boyd, an aviation consultant who has worked recently for both
American and the union, said United will probably win the competition
because it would link the two capitals. Still, he faulted American for
changing its plan, which highlighted tense labor-management relations.

   "This one was dead in the water anyway, but everybody should have kept
their mouths shut about any arguments in the cockpit," he said.

   Leaders of the pilots' union have been angry at the company since early
this year, when it gave bonuses to about 1,000 executives and managers,
with a few topping $1 million. Pilots are still living under wage
concessions they approved in 2003, when American was near bankruptcy.

   Northwest asked the Transportation Department to disqualify American from
the competition for making a "radical change" after the bidding deadline.
United said American's new route would be "even more inconvenient" for
customers.

   Each of the airlines competing for the China routes has recruited
politicians and the flying public to woo the Transportation Department.

   Northwest gathered 168,000 letters of support, while United lined up 110
congressional backers and hired the nation's former top aviation regulator
to lead its campaign. American, a unit of Fort Worth-based AMR Corp., said
108 members of Congress and 15 governors supported its bid. ---------------=
-------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2006 AP

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]