Category Archives: Latest News

Air Travel: Southwest’s New Flights, New Podcasts on Delta

New flights and new entertainment options lead this week’s air travel news. 

In flight news, this week Southwest Airlines published its extended flight schedule through October 31. Starting Saturday, August 10, the airline will add Saturday-only service between Dallas Love Field and Corpus Christi. Additionally, the carrier is adding service on Saturdays and Sundays between Richmond, Virginia and Tampa, Florida.

The carrier also announced the return of previously-operated seasonal service beginning August 10, 2019, on Saturdays between Hartford, CT, and Fort Lauderdale; Buffalo and Fort Lauderdale; Boise and Chicago Midway; Newark and Orlando; Richmond and Orlando; and Milwaukee and Seattle. Southwest’s seasonal weekend service between Des Moines and Phoenix will also once again be offered beginning August 10. 

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In the Caribbean, this week the island of Grenada released an update on the latest new airlift to the destination. Starting in December, American Airlines, Sunwing and Air Canada all added new flights. American added an additional flight on Saturdays out of Miami, ending service March 30, while Sunwing launched 22 flights from Toronto Pearson, with service ending April 21. Air Canada added a third weekly flight, running every Tuesday and also out of Toronto Pearson. That service ends on March 26.

In in-flight entertainment news, this week Delta announced the addition of ad-free podcasts to its Delta Studio seatback entertainment, which is available on more than 600 aircraft as of February 1. The new podcasts include Dr. Death – a true crime podcast that follows the story of a charming surgeon from Texas convicted of widespread and lethal malpractice, as well as Business Wars, The A24 Podcast, This American Life, Hello Sunshine Podcast and The goop Podcast

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Kazakh air travel market growth slows

Air Astana and SCAT Airlines, twin leaders of Kazakhstan’s air travel market, added five aircraft last year (ATO.ru)

Kazakhstan’s airports handled 14 million passengers in 2018, the country’s Civil Aviation Committee reports, pointing out that the figure is level with that of the previous year. In the same period, the number of transfer passengers in the total traffic increased by 40 per cent.

Compared to 2017’s high performance – inspired by the Expo world fair held in Astana, which engendered a 23.3 per cent growth in traffic – last year Kazakh airlines saw their traffic grow by 6.8 per cent to 7.9 million passengers, which is still considered an encouraging development, the authorities note.

The regulators consider that the greatest potential lies in developing the central Asian country’s international transfer business. “The transportation of transfer passengers is showing unprecedented growth,” reveals the committee. In 2018 some 900,000 transfer passengers travelled through Kazakhstan, a number that is expected to reach 1.6 million in 2020, according to Zhenis Kasymbek the nation’s minister for industry and infrastructure development, who also points out that less than a decade ago, in 2010, the number of transit passengers barely totalled 20,000.

A three-day visa grace period for Chinese citizens travelling through Kazakhstan – an incentive that has been in effect for a few years and was last year extended to citizens of India – may have had a significant positive effect on the transfer numbers. That visa-friendly regime has been prolonged to this year as well.

According to Russian Aviation Insider’s data, in 2018 Kazakhstan’s two major airports at Almaty and Astana collectively handled some 10.2 million passengers, with their share in the country’s total air travel market rising to 73 per cent.

Sustainable development is also being seen in the country’s international air travel sector, the Civil Aviation Committee report continues. Last year the country’s airlines launched 14 new international flights: from Astana to Russia’s Kazan, Tyumen, Chelyabinsk, Krasnodar, Tomsk and Sochi; to Dushanbe in Tajikistan, Vilnius in Lithuania and Helsinki in Finland: and also from Almaty to Riga (Latvia) and Krasnoyarsk (Russia), between Pavlodar and Novosibirsk (Russia), Atyrau and Frankfurt (Germany) and Kzyl-Orda and Moscow (Russia).

“From 73 in 2013 the number of international routes increased to 96 in 2018. There are 23 foreign airlines offering scheduled service to Kazakhstan,” the report reads.

Last year Zhenis Kazymbek projected that, by 2020, the annual traffic of Kazakh carriers could collectively reach 10 million passengers. For this to become reality, this year’s traffic improvement should add at least two million to 2018’s results and, to facilitate reaching this goal, national carrier Air Astana has created a low-cost carrier (LLC) subsidiary called Fly Arystan, with its launch flights expected in May.

The local authorities are counting on the new LCC introducing at least one million passengers in the first year of its operations and it is felt that the new service will attract people who otherwise could not afford air travel.

Last year demonstrated that the Kazakh population’s aviation mobility remains quite low, as the total traffic of the country’s airports is still less than that of its population of 18.4 million people. In 2018 the industry was also plagued by a combination of the devaluation of the tenge national currency, spiking fuel costs and increased airport handling fees.

After air travel chaos, lawmakers propose funding FAA in future shutdowns

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Two House lawmakers proposed legislation on Friday that would ensure federal aviation personnel such as air traffic controllers and airline safety inspectors would be paid in a government shutdown, as another funding deadline looms next week.

The proposal came two weeks after a shortage of air traffic controllers, who were working unpaid during the partial government shutdown last month, delayed flights throughout the eastern U.S. Lawmakers and the Trump administration reached a deal to temporarily fund the government shortly after the air travel disruption.

Lawmakers now have until Feb. 15 to come up with a border security deal or risk another shutdown. The aviation industry had been among the most vocal against the 35-day shutdown, the longest ever, as passengers faced long lines at some of the country’s busiest airports due to absences of unpaid Transportation Security Administration screeners. Airlines also faced approval delays for new routes and aircraft because federal safety inspectors were furloughed.

The bill was introduced by Peter DeFazio, an Oregon Democrat and chairman of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, and the aviation subcommittee chair, Rick Larsen, a Democrat from Washington. It proposes using a special fund to continue to pay FAA personnel, including the country’s roughly 14,000 air traffic controllers.

The funding wouldn’t apply to TSA officers because they work under the Department of Homeland Security, not the FAA.

Using the Airport and Airway Trust Fund, which is fed by taxes from airline tickets, jet fuel and cargo, would “ensure essential personnel who work under immensely stressful situations continue to get paid, and that the largest, busiest and most complex airspace system in the world remains safe for passengers and employees,” Larsen said in a statement.

Paul Rinaldi, president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, the union that represents air traffic controllers, supported the bill. He said that controllers “experienced financial stress due to a lack of income, which led to distractions and significant fatigue for people who need to be 100 percent focused on safety.”

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00:30 The Green New Deal (28 minutes)

Freshman Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez introduced her Green New Deal this week. If you thought the radical left couldn’t get any more radical—think again. Within a 10-year time frame, Ocasio-Cortez’s new deal would see the abolishment of air travel, the end of the combustion engine, and the end of meat consumption. At first glance, the deal reads like a parody. But she’s serious. And the shocking thing is, nearly all of the potential 2020 Democratic candidates back the Green New Deal. On the first half of today’s show, we take a closer look at the radical left’s utopian fantasy.

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Herbert W. Armstrong set a marvelous example of surrendering to God. In this segment, I talk about some of the difficult lessons he learned in the lead-up to his conversion to God’s truth.

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National Strike in Belgium to Cause Major Air Travel Disruptions

A national strike in Belgium is set to disrupt air travel and public transport. The strike is set to take place next Wednesday, February 13, officially running from 10 p.m. the night before to 10 p.m. the night of February 13 (all times local). 

Brussels Airlines reports that it expects major flight disruptions on February 13. The airline had already cancelled 28 out of the total 222 flights planned for that day as of last week; however, as more information on the scale of the strike has become available, the airline has decided to cancel an additional 122 flights. That is a total of 68 percent of the airline’s flights canceled, affecting 11,288 passengers. 

Brussels Airlines says that passengers with canceled flights who no longer wish to travel can request a full refund of their ticket. Refunds can be requested online on www.brusselsairlines.com/refund. Rebookings are also available via the airline’s call center at 32-2-723-2362. 

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The list of all cancelled Brussels Airlines flights is available here. 

According to the Brussels Times, unions are holding the strike to protest a breakdown in talks involving wages within the Group of Ten, an organization comprised of unions and managers. While the breakdown in talks only affects private sector unions, public sector unions – including those representing rail workers – have joined the strike call, which could lead to disruptions in public transportation on February 13. The SNCB rail service is legally obligated to hold a minimum service; however, other areas of public transportation could experience even more severe disruptions. 

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Green New Deal: Ocasio-Cortez aims to make air travel obsolete, aid those ‘unwilling’ to work

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez responds to criticism from Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez responds to criticism from Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan following the State of the Union.

In what may be the most far-reaching proposal to ever be considered in Congress, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., unveiled her “Green New Deal” on Thursday — a government-led overhaul of virtually every aspect of American life that would guarantee a host of taxpayer-covered benefits for all and phase out fossil fuels.

Along the way, her office says the plan would aim to make air travel obsolete, upgrade or replace every building in America to ensure energy efficiency and give economic security even to those “unwilling” to work.

“Today is the day that we truly embark on a comprehensive agenda of economic, social and racial justice in the United States of America,” she said alongside Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., and other lawmakers outside the Capitol. “That’s what this agenda is all about.”

PELOSI THROWS SHADE AS GREEN NEW DEAL UNVEILED: ‘GREEN DREAM OR WHATEVER THEY CALL IT’

The plan, which calls for a massive package of big-government proposals including health care for all, quickly picked up the backing of major 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls including Sens. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Cory Booker, D-N.J. — who all co-sponsored the resolution.

“Our history is a testimony to the achievement of what some think is impossible — we must take bold action now,” Booker tweeted.

While the resolution itself would do very little because it is non-binding, it is the first time the policy proposal has been formally outlined in Congress. The resolution says “a new national social, industrial and economic mobilization on a scale not seen since World War II and the New Deal” is an opportunity to tackle systemic injustices toward minority groups, create millions of high-wage jobs and “provide unprecedented levels of prosperity and economic security for all people of the United States.”

Its proposals include “net-zero greenhouse gas emissions through a fair and just transition for all communities and workers;” job creation; infrastructure investment; guarantees of clean water, healthy food and sustainable environment; and a curiously undefined “access to nature.”

Beyond those broad proposals, the plan and accompanying documents from Ocasio-Cortez include a range of far-fetched goals — and drew swift scorn from Republicans and other critics. The Republican National Committee dubbed it a “socialist wish list” that would kill at least 1 million jobs and disrupt global trade — while costing trillions.

The resolution, for instance, includes a proposal to “upgrade all existing buildings” in the country in order to achieve energy efficiency, safety, affordability, durability and comfort.

An accompanying FAQ, released by Ocasio-Cortez’s office and obtained by NPR, goes even further, calling to “upgrade or replace every building in US for state-of-the-art energy efficiency.” A second similar FAQ on her website echoed some of those prescriptions though was later removed.

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The resolution also backs the concept of high-speed rail as a proposal to reduce carbon emissions — but the FAQ goes so far as to urge that development “at a scale where air travel stops becoming necessary.”

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It also promises “economic security for all who are unable or unwilling to work.” What constitutes economic security is not clear, but the plan does call for programs including a federal job guarantee, universal health care and “affordable, safe, and adequate housing.”

The FAQ also notes that it has set a goal of net-zero, rather than zero, emissions in 10 years “because we aren’t sure that we’ll be able to get rid of farting cows and airplanes that fast.”

However, the push is likely to see resistance not only from Republicans, but even some Democrats. Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, was asked about the plan to replace planes with high-speed rail, and did not seem impressed.

“That would be pretty hard for Hawaii,” she laughed.

On Wednesday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appeared to dismiss the plan.

“It will be one of several or maybe many suggestions that we receive,” Pelosi told Politico on Wednesday. “The green dream or whatever they call it, nobody knows what it is, but they’re for it right?”

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Pelosi took a more conciliatory tone on Thursday, saying: “Quite frankly, I haven’t seen it, but I do know it’s enthusiastic and we welcome all the enthusiasm that is out there.”

But in the press conference outside the Capitol Thursday, Ocasio-Cortez said she didn’t mind the phrase “green dream.”

“I don’t consider that to be a dismissive term,” she said. It’s a great term.”

Fox News’ Jason Donner contributed to this report.

Air Travel Is Showing Effects of the Government Shutdown

The partial government shutdown is starting to strain the national aviation system, with unpaid security screeners staying home, air-traffic controllers suing the government and safety inspectors off the job.

Miami International Airport is providing the most visible evidence yet that the shutdown is at least making air travel less convenient.

Facing double the usual number of absences among unpaid TSA screeners, the Miami airport will close one of its concourses most of Saturday, Sunday and Monday to make sure TSA can adequately staff the remaining security checkpoints.

Meanwhile, the national union representing 10000 air traffic controllers — who are also working without pay during the shutdown, now in its 21st day — sued the government Friday, claiming they are illegally being denied pay.

And aviation-safety inspectors are still off the job, deemed not to be essential enough to keep working during the shutdown.

Here is a roundup of recent developments in the partial government shutdown’s impact on air travel.

Awol Screeners

The Transportation Security Administration said that 5.1 percent of screeners were absent on Thursday, up from 3.3 percent on the same date last year. The TSA has 51,000 transportation-security officers, who have continued to work because they are deemed essential employees.

Screeners represent just 6 percent of government workers who didn’t get paychecks Friday because of the shutdown. Airline-industry officials worry that they are particularly likely to stop showing up because their relatively low pay means they could quickly struggle to pay bills without money coming in.

Screeners start around $24,000 a year, and most earn between $26,000 and $35,000, according to TSA.

The agency has very few tools to deal with a severe shortage. It has a team of non-essential employees who are trained to screen air travelers, but that is only a stopgap designed to cover for shortages at one or two airports during a natural disaster.

Terminal Closure

Miami International, the nation’s 25th-busiest airport, plans to close off Concourse G at 1 p.m. for the next three days and shift flights to other terminals.

“Our wait times have been normal and operations have been smooth so far, but the partial closure is being done in an abundance of caution,” airport spokesman Greg Chin said Friday.

Other major airports surveyed by The Associated Press said they had no immediate plans to close terminals or take other drastic measures.

“We are at normal operations. We are, though, very much monitoring checkpoints, and we’re in close contact with the federal authorities and the airlines,” said Cynthia Vega, a spokeswoman for Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

Other airports had similar messages.

Air Traffic Controllers

About 10,000 air traffic controllers under the Federal Aviation Administration continue to work without pay. On Friday, their union, the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, filed a lawsuit in federal court in Washington and asked for an order that its members get paid.

Union President Paul Rinaldi says there is already a shortage of controllers, and if current controllers decide to retire — about 1,900 are eligible — the government could be forced to restrict air traffic, creating flight delays. There is no indication that is happening yet.

Safety Inspectors

About 3,300 aviation safety inspectors under the FAA are not working — since 2013, they have not been considered essential employees who must stay on the job during government shutdowns. They oversee and certify inspections done by employees of airlines and aircraft-repair shops.

“Our inspectors are the oversight, they are the regulatory side of the house for the FAA,” said Mike Perrone, president of the Professional Aviation Safety Specialists union. Their work is not getting done, he said.

An FAA spokesman said earlier this week that the agency is recalling inspectors and focusing resources on overseeing airline operations. He declined to say how many inspectors are working, but union officials believe it’s about 100.

“A hundred out of 3,300 is probably not real good odds,” said Stephen Carl, an FAA inspector in Florida. “Please put us back on the job right now. Aviation is not being overseen.”

Carl said ongoing investigations have been put on hold by the shutdown.

Security Concerns

Jeffrey Price, an aviation-security consultant and a professor at Metropolitan State University of Denver, expects more TSA agents will fail to show up, creating longer lines and creating a potential target for terrorists at airports.

“As the lines slow down and the crowds grow larger, it puts more and more passengers at risk from an attack,” Price said. He added, “The screeners who do come to work will be forced to make up the slack, which erodes their effectiveness even more.”

Dumping TSA

Longer lines will alienate travelers and could push more airports to replace government employees with privately contracted screening agents. Airports in San Francisco and Kansas City already do that, with approval from the Transportation Department.

In 2016 — when TSA was understaffed at many airports, creating lines long enough to make many travelers miss their flights — some airports explored hiring contractors or using airport or airline employees to help TSA agents with tasks such as handling bins at checkpoints.

Mike Boyd, a consultant to airports, said TSA leaders will do what they can to streamline the screening process, which he called “pretty much of a veneer” even before the government shutdown.

The Miami airport, which has intensified the debate over TSA with its concourse closure, is not yet considering privatizing its passenger-screening operation, a spokesman said.

Helping Out

Some airports are doing what they can to help federal employees who are working without pay.

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport organized a resource fair to bring together credit unions, utility representatives and nonprofit organizations to help federal employees access short term loans and assistance programs, said spokesman Perry Cooper.

Tampa International Airport is working with different agencies to set up a food pantry, get bus passes and work with utilities to help hundreds of federal employees who may be struggling to pay bills.

Pittsburgh International Airport, meanwhile, delivered lunches Friday to TSA workers and air traffic controllers, and they plan to do so every Friday until the shutdown ends.

Contact us at editors@time.com.

Discounts on Ferry, Air Travel for Rhodes Marathon Announced

Photo Source: www.rhodesmarathon.gr

Blue Star Ferries and AEGEAN are once again supporting the 6th International Roads to Rhodes Marathon and will offer discounts on ferry and air tickets for those who wish to travel to the Dodecanese island for the sports event, which will be held on April 14.

As the official sea transport sponsor of the event, Blue Star Ferries has announced a 50 percent discount on passenger tickets (cabin and economy class) and a 30 percent discount on vehicles for travel from Piraeus, Kos, Kalymnos, Leros and Syros to Rhodes, between April 11-17.

AEGEAN, as the official air carrier of the marathon, is offering a 20 percent discount on AEGEAN and Olympic Air tickets for the runners who wish to take part. The offer is available for tickets purchased until March 31, for travel between April 10-16, from domestic and international destinations to Rhodes.

Photo Source: www.rhodesmarathon.gr © Philippos Philippou

The event, which is included on the calendar of the Association of International Marathons and Distance Races (AIMS), is co-organized by the South Aegean Region and the Hellenic Athletics Federation (SEGAS) EAS Dodecanese branch, with the support of the Rhodes Municipality and the Rhodes Hoteliers Association. It will be held under the auspices of the Greek National Tourism Organization (GNTO).

Registration is currently open for the marathon, half-marathon, the 10- and 5km races, and can be made online. For more information visit the website: www.rhodesmarathon.gr/en/.

How to Fix Air Travel? These Readers Have Answers

Memo to airlines from Wall Street Journal readers: Fix boarding procedures and figure out better allocation of overhead bin space, even if that means charging fees for carry-ons.

Asked for ideas on improving air travel, many readers suggested stopping the continued decline in value for frequent-flier miles. Others zeroed in on boarding and baggage as pain points that airlines could fix. Boarding logjams and carry-on baggage slow down departures and raise anxiety.