SFGate: U.S. Airline Delays Worsen in August

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Wednesday, October 3, 2007 (AP)
U.S. Airline Delays Worsen in August
By DAN CATERINICCHIA, AP Business Writer


   (10-03) 10:23 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --

   The airline industry's dismal on-time performance in 2007 continued in
August with nearly 30 percent of flights delayed.

   The most recent government data, which also showed a surge in fliers'
complaints, was released less than a week after President Bush promised to
help fix the problem.

   Forcing carriers to shrink their flight schedules or to pay more to fly
during peak travel periods are some of the steps the government is
considering.

   The nation's 20 largest carriers reported an on-time arrival rate of 71.7
percent in August, down from 75.8 percent a year ago, the Department of
Transportation's Bureau of Transportation Statistics said Wednesday. The
on-time rate was 69.8 percent in July and 68.1 percent in June.

   Through August, more than 25 percent of flights have arrived late —
the industry's worst on-time performance since comparable data began being
collected in 1995.

   The airline industry and the Federal Aviation Administration blame the
delays on outdated air traffic control technology, bad weather and
increasing passenger traffic. Analysts say commercial airlines' use of
smaller planes is partly to blame for increased congestion in the skies
and on runways, as is an increase in general aviation aircraft used by
corporate travelers.

   Whatever the cause of the worsening delays, travelers have noticed.

   Customer complaints nearly doubled to 1,634 in August compared with 864 =
in
the same month last year. Poor weather conditions were blamed for more
than 38 percent of delays in August, a slight increase from a year ago.

   "Endless hours sitting in an airplane on a runway with no communication
between a pilot and the airport is just not right," Bush said last week
after meeting with Transportation Secretary Mary Peters and the acting
head of the FAA, Bobby Sturgell.

   Peters asked airlines to form a plan to improve scheduling at New York's
John F. Kennedy International Airport, one of the nation's busiest.
Without an industry solution, the department is prepared to issue a
scheduling reduction order, she said.

   The government also could force a so-called congestion pricing model upon
the industry, Peters said, but airline executives last week told Congress
that raising flying costs during peak periods would simply result in
higher fares.

   The airlines and the FAA are pressing for a new, satellite-based air
traffic control system that will cost about $15 billion and take nearly 20
years to complete. Airline traffic is projected to double by 2025.

   The FAA in late August awarded ITT Corp. a contract worth up to $1.8
billion to build the first portion the system, known as NextGen. The
agency on Tuesday said it wants all planes to be equipped to use the new
navigation technology by 2020.

   "NextGen is pie in the sky. What about Now-Gen?" Patrick Forrey, preside=
nt
of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, quipped Tuesday in a
conference call with reporters.

   The union says delays will worsen unless the government hires more membe=
rs
and pays them better. The FAA and the union have been locked in a contract
dispute since the agency declared an impasse last year.

   Bush on Saturday signed a stopgap spending bill to keep Cabinet
departments running at current levels through mid-November. Congress has
until then to reauthorize the FAA and possibly raise taxes and fees to pay
for upgrades to the air traffic control system and other programs.
Commercial airlines are battling corporate jets and small plane operators
over what share of the cost they each should shoulder.

   The commercial airline industry and the White House say a House-passed F=
AA
funding bill does not fairly link fees to system use.

   August's on-time performance was the second worst on record for that
month, topped only by a 70 percent arrival rate in 2000. But not all
airline performance was poor.

   Aloha Airlines had the highest on-time arrival rate at 97 percent,
followed by Hawaiian Holdings Inc.'s Hawaiian Airlines at 93.7 percent and
Southwest Airlines at 77.7 percent, according to government data.

   But almost half of Atlantic Southeast Airlines were delayed, and two of
its flights arrived late every time they took off. The Delta Connection
carrier, which is owned by SkyWest Inc., had the lowest on-time arrival
rate at 55 percent, followed by United Airlines at 66.2 percent and Alaska
Airlines at 67.1 percent.

   The rates of mishandled baggage fell to about 7.6 reports per 1,000
passengers from 8.1 reports a year ago, according to government data. -----=
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Copyright 2007 AP

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