SFGate: Pack light or pay up for holiday flights

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Tuesday, December 23, 2008 (AP)
Pack light or pay up for holiday flights
By HARRY R. WEBER, AP Airlines Writer


   (12-23) 11:01 PST ATLANTA (AP) --
   When airlines started charging some passengers $15 or more earlier this
year to check their bags, they blamed soaring fuel costs. Since then, oil
has plummeted. Yet the industry hasn't stowed away the bag fees.
   Many of us are still paying to fly with a suitcase that doesn't squeeze
into the overhead bin or under the seat.
   The reason is simple: Airlines are still losing money, though now largely
because of the recession instead of oil.
   And don't expect the fee to disappear even when the economy rebounds.
Airlines are finding the fees to be a reliable source of revenue and say
that such charges allow passengers to choose only the services they want.
   Passengers, meanwhile, are paying up and grumbling. Many are being socke=
d,
on average, $15 for the first bag and $25 for the second.
   "I think it's unfair and I think it's highway robbery," said Benjamin
Johnson, a 38-year-old government employee, as he headed from Atlanta to
Orlando, Fla.
   For the airlines, the bag fees, on top of charges for other once-free
amenities, add up to much-needed revenue. The industry is expected to lose
$4 billion for 2008, excluding one-time items, despite the plunge in the
price of a barrel of oil from $147 in July to around $40 this week, said
Calyon Securities airline analyst Ray Neidl.
   Airlines now say they are being hurt by the recession, which has caused
demand for seats to drop. The International Air Transport Association said
global passenger traffic declined 1.3 percent in October from a year
earlier.
   Airlines also have been weighed down by bad bets they made on the price =
of
fuel when it was skyrocketing. After locking in at prices that looked
reasonable earlier this year, some are paying substantially more than
market price for a portion of their fuel.
   Airlines do not break out the revenue brought in by baggage fees.
   "While fuel prices have fallen, the economy has created a new uncertainty
for us, and the industry's going to lose billions of dollars this year,"
said Doug Parker, chief of US Airways Group Inc. "Indeed, it was
fuel-driven economic concerns, but now we have different economic
concerns. And having said that, I, for one at least, believe it's the
right model for the business, irrespective of what environment we're in."
   Airlines say the fees are a new way of doing business in which services
that were once bundled into the price of a ticket are offered a la carte.
   An October poll of frequent travelers found that half prefer a lower
ticket price in exchange for a la carte pricing for food, beverages,
headphones and blankets. But the same survey, conducted for IBM, found
that 82 percent described the baggage fees as a "rip-off." By comparison,
only 45 percent viewed food and nonalcoholic drinks that way.
   After getting off a recent flight to Atlanta, insurance sales
representative Cecilia Kolstad said it was crazy she had to fork over
extra money to check a bag.
   But "if it's between that and seeing an airline go out of business I gue=
ss
I'll pay the $15 because I like to fly," said Kolstad, 55, of Pembroke
Pines, Fla.
   Some travelers bypass the fees by packing lighter. Airlines typically
waive the fees for passengers who have elite status in their frequent
flier clubs, first-class passengers, and travelers on international
flights.
   Passengers also can get around the fees for the first two bags by booking
on Southwest Airlines, though it doesn't fly to some major cities such as
Boston, Atlanta and Miami. But how long Southwest can go without charging
the fees is anyone's guess.
   Dave Ridley, a Southwest marketing executive, said in October his airline
would be surveying people about charges, and he would not rule out fees in
the future.
   ___
   AP Airlines Writer Joshua Freed in Chicago and Associated Press Writer
Johnny Clark in Atlanta contributed to this report. -----------------------=
-----------------------------------------------
Copyright 2008 AP

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