Category Archives: Latest News

Air Travel: New Flights to Cancun, São Paulo

The end of Wow Air wasn’t the only big air travel story this week.

This week Volaris announced a number of new flights to and from Cancun. From the United States, the airline added routes out of Albuquerque, Charlotte, Cincinnati – Northern Kentucky Airport, Miami, Milwaukee, San Francisco and St. Louis. Additionally, the airline added a number of new frequencies from Cancun to other cities in Mexico: two new frequencies to Aguascalientes, two León, six to Monterrey, two to San Luis Potosi, one to Tuxtla Gutiérrez and one to Tijuana. All of the new frequencies will begin operating in November.

In South America, Virgin Atlantic announced plans to launch flights between London Heathrow and São Paulo, Brazil in 2020, marking the airline’s first entry into the continent. The airline will operate the nearly 12 hour flight on a Boeing 787 with Upper Class, Premium and Economy Delight, Classic and Light service. 

Luxury Travel Advisor’s ULTRA Summit

In Europe, this week Air France announced plans to launch its La Première service on the Paris – Charles de GaulleAtlanta route for the first time, operating A380 aircraft with four cabins. La Première offers customers tailored, personalized service. The new service officially begins March 31. 

Finally, in technology news, this week JetBlue and Collins Aerospace debuted biometric self-boarding gates at New York – JFK airport. Called SelfPass, the new gates allow passengers to board international flights through one gate in Terminal 5 via a more streamlined boarding process. No registration is required; travelers step up to a camera for a facial match against their travel document. 

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Montgomery air travel jumps 28 percent

CNN Reports Close to 104 million passengers passed though Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in 2017, making it the world’s busiest passenger airport for another year.. Globally, there were significant increases in passenger numbers, air cargo traffic and total aircraft movements. Major connecting hub Atlanta can thank its location as a major connecting hub and port of entry into North America for its continued dominance. The city is within a two-hour flight of 80% of the United States population of more than 300 million people.
Wochit

World’s First All-Electric Airline Will Soon Fly in Pacific Northwest

The world’s first all-electric airline will soon be whisking passengers to destinations in the Pacific Northwest of the United States and Canada.

Harbour Air, North America’s largest seaplane airline, and magniX, a leading developer of electric propulsion systems for aircraft, announced a partnership to convert Harbour Air’s entire fleet of more than 40 seaplanes to electric power.

The new ePlanes will be powered by a 750-horsepower all-electric motor developed by magniX. They will use no fossil fuels and produce zero emissions.

(WATCH: Strong Winds Send Man Flying)

Harbour Air operates 12 flights between hubs like Seattle and Vancouver and throughout the remote Canadian wilderness. The airline flies more than 500,000 passengers on 30,000 commercial flights a year, and also has a robust cargo business.

The DHC-2 de Havilland Beaver, which carries six passengers, will be the first in Harbour Air’s fleet to be converted to electric power. Initial test flights are expected to take place later this year. The airline’s fleet also includes single- and twin-engine de Havilland Otters and a Cessna Grand Caravan EX.

Founder and CEO Greg McDougall said the airline has long been dedicated to sustainability. In 2007, Harbour Air became the first fully carbon-neutral airline in North America.

“Through our commitment to making a positive impact on people’s lives, the communities where we operate and the environment, we are once again pushing the boundaries of aviation by becoming the first commercial aircraft to be powered by electric propulsion,” McDougall said.

While much of the focus to reduce carbon footprint has been on cars, electric airplanes are widely viewed as key to reducing carbon emissions. Aviation – more specifically, commercial airliners – are one of the world’s largest contributors of carbon emissions, accounting for about two percent of global greenhouse gas emissions worldwide, according to the European Commission.

(MORE: Reducing Fossil Fuels Could Save Millions of Lives Each Year)

The EC says a round-trip flight from London to New York generates about the same level of emissions as the average person in the EU does by heating their home for a whole year. And that number is expected to increase by as much as 700 percent by 2050.

That’s why the EC and other global organizations are encouraging countries to pursue new aircraft technology. Norway announced a plan last year to convert all domestic flights less than 90 minutes in duration to electric power by 2040, the Guardian reported.

Research and development in the area of electric and hybrid aircraft is growing rapidly, from small startups to major corporations. NASA is testing the all-electric X-57 aircraft, and researchers there predict the technology could be used for everything from air taxis to subsonic flight.

For now, the focus is mostly on short-haul flights, as rapid advancements in electric propulsion and battery technology are making it more and more viable for airplanes to fly those routes.

“In 2018, 75 percent of worldwide airline flights were 1,000 miles or less in range … we see tremendous potential for electric aviation to transform this heavily trafficked ‘middle mile’ range,” said Roei Ganzarski, CEO of magniX.

How Missourians Can Get Real ID Licenses, And What That Means For Air Travel

Missourians can now apply for updated licenses and other state identification cards, which will be required to board airplanes and enter federal buildings and military bases late next year.

The Missouri Department of Revenue is offering the new IDs at all state license offices to comply with the federal Real ID Act of 2005.

By Oct. 1, 2020, residents of every U.S. state and territory will be required to present Real ID-compliant drivers licenses or identification cards to board domestic flights, enter nuclear power plants and access federal buildings, including federal courthouses and military bases.

However, airline travelers with noncompliant licenses after October 2020 will still be allowed to fly if they present a valid passport, passport card or other approved forms of identification.

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How do I know if I have a Real ID card?

Missouri’s Real ID cards will have gold stars located in the upper right hand of the card, according to the Missouri Department of Revenue website. Noncompliant IDs will have “not for Real ID purposes” printed on the same area on the card.

Both Real ID-compliant and noncompliant cards may also be marked as “limited term,” based on how applicants verified their legal status.

The license-card design will otherwise look the same as the old IDs.

Do I have to update my license?

Missouri was one of the last states to comply with the federal Real ID law after some state lawmakers opposed the act due to privacy concerns. Those concerns settled after legislators agreed to make applying for a Real ID card optional.

As part of the deal, lawmakers made it a crime to misuse or unlawfully distribute a driver’s data. They also banned storing Social Security numbers in a database that the state or federal government has access to.

When should I get the new ID? 

Joey Plaggenberg, director of Missouri’s Motor Vehicle and Driver Licensing Division said in a statement that his department expects license offices to be crowded and have longer wait times during the initial weeks of offering the new IDs. Unless your ID is expiring within the next month, Plaggenberg recommends avoiding the lines and waiting until the rush subsides.

“There’s no immediate need to rush to apply for a Real ID-compliant license or ID card, because the current Missouri-issued license and ID card will afford the same access until October 2020,” said Plaggenberg.

Applicants need to show proof of identity, legal status, a social security number and two documents verifying Missouri residency. New driver license and nondriver license fees range from $3.50 to $45, depending on the applicant’s age and the duration of license.

The Illinois Secretary of State’s Office also is now issuing Real ID-compliant licenses.

The federal Real ID law, passed following the 9/11 attacks, set standards for issuing identification cards, including security enhancements and proof that recipients are legally in the country.

Correction: The Illinois Secretary of State’s Office issues Real ID-compliant licenses in Illinois. A previous version of this story incorrectly stated which office issues Real ID cards.

Follow Andy Tsubasa Field on Twitter @AndyTsubasaF.

Send questions and comments about this story to feedback@stlpublicradio.org

Air travel in Tibet achieves 54 years of safe operation

Planes stand at Lhasa Kongga International Airport in China’s Tibet Autonomous Region on March 26. [Photo by Yang Yunpeng/China.org.cn]

The civil aviation industry of Tibet Autonomous Region has operated safely for 54 consecutive years since the first route between Beijing and Lhasa was opened in March 1965. 

“This is a miracle in the history of aviation, given the peculiar geological and climate features in Tibet,” said Wen Bin, Communist Party of China (CPC) chief of the Tibetan Branch of the Civil Aviation Administration of China.

“It is an unprecedented achievement that a large group of airports built at high altitude have safely operated for such a long time,” Wen said in an interview on Tuesday.

Currently, there are five airports in Tibet, Lhasa Kongga International Airport, Qamdo Bangda Airport, Nyingchi Mainling Airport, Nagri Gunsa Airport and Shigatse Peace Airport.

Wen said that Tibet, with its extreme climate and average altitude of more than 4,000 meters, was considered as “prohibited airspace”. However, the past few decades have witnessed remarkable progress in Tibet’s civil aviation.

According to figures released by the branch, there are 92 international and domestic routes operating in Tibet. Last year, Tibet’s airports served a total of 5.3 million passengers, a 17 percent increase from the previous year; while cargo throughput reached 39,945 tons, an increase of 12.9 percent.

Wen said that Tibet will continue to increase its air capacity by building three new airports in Shannan, Dingri and Burang. “The airports are expected to start construction within the year and be put into service in 2022.”

<!–enpproperty 746254502019-03-29 10:46:00:9By Zhang LiyingAir travel in Tibet achieves 54 years of safe operationTibet, civil aviation, China10077075074NationNationhttp://www.china.org.cn/china/2019-03/29/content_74625450.htmnullChina.org.cnTibet’s civil aviation has operated safely for 54 consecutive years despite the extreme climate and high altitude of the region.1/enpproperty–>

BLADE Brings Jet-Setting To The Masses With $195 Helicopter To JFK

Most New Yorkers associate BLADE with jetting the one percent to glamorous destinations like the Hamptons, Nantucket and Stowe via helicopter, seaplane or charter. Come summer you’ll be hard pressed to find anyone at Tutto Il Giorno or Sunset Beach who didn’t get out east by ride sharing a Blade Bounce helicopter. But behind the luxurious, vintage-inspired lounges and exclusive jet service, Blade’s master plan goes way beyond launching Wall Street players into the sky. Blade founder and chief executive officer Rob Wiesenthal wants to solve New York’s traffic crisis, and is aiming to do so by democratizing semi-private air travel.

On Monday, in its largest service expansion to date, Blade launched continuous helicopter service between Manhattan and John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK) every weekday from 7:00am to 7:00pm at the price of $195 per leg. The trip is roughly the same cost as taking a luxury SUV, and at a five minute commute time rather than a two hour standstill on the Long Island Expressway. The shared flight service will be the largest urban mobility initiative in the United States, one Mr. Wiesenthal  hopes will advance Blade’s mission of reducing traffic through accessibly-priced urban aviation.

A passenger exiting a BLADE Bounce helicopter

Blade

“We’re trying to solve a huge problem,” says Mr. Wiesenthal. “We’re dealing with an infrastructure in New York City that was designed hundreds of years ago. So you have three options. You can make the roads wider, you can go underground, which we already did, or you can go into the sky. That’s why Blade is evolving into an urban air mobility company. We fly more people in and out of city centers than any other company in the U.S. right now. We want to focus on the areas where we see friction. Our sweet spot is this under 50 mile, ‘get out of the congestion’ model.  That’s the friction we want to address.”

Starting this week, Blade flights will operate between Blade Lounge West at the West 30th Street Heliport and JFK airport, with ground transportation included between the JFK helipad and all commercial terminals. For Mr. Wiesenthal, the hope is that continuous helicopter service at $195 per seat means fewer single-flyer helicopters dropping passengers solely in one direction, and a gentle way for the public to get a taste of next-generation urban air mobility.

Rob Wiesenthal

BLADE

“All of these people were spending all this money, and the helicopter charter world was a real B2B, strange, functionary experience,” Mr. Wiesenthal  says. “It didn’t make sense in the world of Instagram. Blade exists because the average helicopter has 1.7 people and they spend $6,000 to fly 90 miles and they spend $3,000 to get to the airport. We got the price down to black car level. We’re also using the quietest rides in the city today, the Bell 206L-4.”

Additionally, BLADE and American Airlines recently announced that fliers who are connecting to or arriving from an American Airlines flight at JFK can be transferred from plane to helicopter using American Airlines Five Star Service. This enhancement provides a seamless, on-tarmac connection and can be purchased using the Blade app or directly from American Airlines.

Blade Lounge East

BLADE

Los Angeles is also getting in on the Blade treatment. The company is building the city’s first rooftop helicopter lounge across from the Staples Center to transport passengers directly to Los Angeles International Airport (LAX). The space will join New York’s other stylish, retro-inspired Blade lounges at East 34th Street, East 23rd Street, Wall Street and West 30th Street, the latter of which is just 1,000 feet from Hudson Yards, the new “city within a city” that houses such corporations as HBO, Warner Media, CNN and L’Oreal.

On-site at JFK, Blade will have a presence in the lobby of the soon-to-be-opened TWA Hotel, an ambitious re-imagination of Eero Saarinen’s iconic TWA Flight Center, originally built in 1962. Hotel guests can arrange for Blade flights to Manhattan or to any destination where Blade flies. They change depending on the season. Blade most recently offered passengers seats on its BLADEone service to Miami. The program seeks to be the white space between a first class ticket and $20,000 private air travel. A round trip ticket on a BLADEone costs about $2,250 from Westchester or Miami.

Mr. Wiesenthal only sees the need for urban aviation growing with every app-hailing car clogging city streets or new luxury residence going up. According to NYCdata, nearly 60 million passengers traveled between JFK and New York in 2017, up from 32 million in 2003. Mr. Wiesenthal’s plan is to eventually have next-generation eVTOL (electric vertical takeoff and landing) aircrafts herding commuters from nearby suburbs into New York for $30 a day. Until then, he’ll be working to lower prices and tackle highway congestion, and in the meantime, his Hamptons client remains loyal.

“The average Blade passenger comes to our lounge 45 minutes early to start the adventure,” Mr. Wiesenthal. On a Friday in the summer, our lounges can have over 100 people. It can get pretty wild.”

 

Senator Uses ‘Star Wars’ to Mock Green New Deal. Mark Hamill Strikes Back

The New Green Deal has a new hope: Star Wars actor Mark Hamill.

On Tuesday, the beloved performer—who portrayed Luke Skywalker in several Star Wars films, most recently 2017’s The Last Jedi—used the force of Twitter to criticize Republican senator Mike Lee of Utah. Lee recently took to the Senate floor to mock the Green New Deal, a proposed resolution that would address climate change.

According to USA Today, Lee claimed the Green New Deal aimed to eliminate air travel—a falsehood, as PolitiFact notes—and employed a photo of Luke Skywalker astride a tauntaun, the snow-skipping creatures first seen in 1980’s The Empire Strikes Back. In that film, tauntauns are used not only for transportation, but also for shelter: At one point, an injured Skywalker is stuffed into the creature’s belly for warmth by his friend Han Solo. “I thought they smelled bad on the outside,” Solo famously remarks.

In his speech, Lee jokingly asked, “In a future without air travel, how are we supposed to get around the vast expanses of, say, Alaska?”, he asked, according to The Daily Caller account. “I’ll tell you how: Tauntauns!” He added: “Not only are tauntauns carbon-neutral, but according to a report a long time ago and issued far far away, they may even be fully recyclable.”

After a tweet featuring Lee’s speech began circulating online, the 67-year-old Hamill began taun-taunting the senator. “I’m using an oversized photo of @SenMikeLee as a prop to push my #MAGA (#MoronsAlwaysGaslightAmericans),” the actor wrote. In another tweet, he used the hashtag #CongressSmellsBadOnTheInside.

Despite Lee’s claims, tauntauns would likely have a hard time surviving in Alaska, which in recent years has experienced record temperature lows. The creatures have a penchant for freezing to death in such chilly weather, and could likely be easy prey for aggressive local predators.

The Latest: Senator Cruz speaks to confidence in air travel – Index

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on Congressional hearings looking into the Federal Aviation Administration’s oversight of Boeing (all times local):

———

5:50 p.m.

Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., challenged FAA Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell on whether the FAA should ban “selling safety features a la carte to the airlines.” Safety features like the MCAS (or Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System) shouldn’t be optional at an extra charge but should be provided gratis like seat belts on vehicles, he said.

“It doesn’t mask any problem,” Elwell insisted in questioning on the MCAS. “What it does, is it gives the proper feel to a pilot because he doesn’t have those cables.”

And Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., raised the prickly issue of whether the FAA, as an independent regulator, has a too-cozy a relationship with the airlines and aircraft makers. He noted that Boeing, a major government contractor with deep longstanding connections in Washington, is locked in intense competition with European maker Airbus.

Political appointees at the FAA pushed the career staff to quickly get done what was needed to get the Max flying, Udall said.

Robert Sumwalt, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, said the issue of the FAA’s posture toward the industry is a part of his investigation.

Elwell said he kept the White House and Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao “fully apprised” of developments before the decision to ground the planes. Chao “never told me to ground it,” he told Senator Blumenthal.

———

5:40 p.m.

FAA Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell refused to answer questions about his conversation with President Donald Trump before the FAA grounded the Boeing 737 Max last week.

Elwell told Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., that it is longstanding executive branch policy through many administrations not to talk about details of discussions with the president.

Blumenthal said he is not aware of the policy and asked if it was law. If it was law, he asked Elwell which law. He also asserted that there was no executive privilege involved.

Elwell said that Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao never told him to ground the planes. He continued to say he wouldn’t talk about a conversation with the president.

The U.S. was among the last nations to ground the planes after the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

———

5:15 p.m.

FAA Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell says information collected from flight data recorders shows no software malfunctions that forced down the nose of Boeing 737 Max jets in the U.S.

The software which makes the Max fly like older 737 jets is under investigation as a possible cause of jet crashes in Ethiopia and Indonesia that killed 346 people.

Under questioning from Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., who flew Blackhawk helicopters in the Iraq war, Elwell said pilots should know what to do if software repeatedly points the nose down.

Duckworth says she still has “muscle memory” on how to resort to manual control if a Blackhawk nose is pointed down.

Elwell says that before the FAA grounded the Max last week, he talked to pilot unions and was told they are confident in the Max’s safety.

“We are absolutely confident in the safety of this aircraft,” Elwell said.

———

4:40 p.m.

FAA Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell says his agency would have to hire 10,000 more workers and spend another $1.8 billion per year to match the number of airplanes certified for flight by its current system of delegating duties to aircraft makers.

Elwell says the system has been in use for about 60 years and is “part of the fabric of what we’ve used to become as safe as we are today.”

He says the FAA conducts strict oversight of the manufacturers, making sure employees have expertise in their field and professional integrity. Elwell also says the FAA’s European equivalent relies more on delegation of tasks to manufacturers than the U.S. does.

But Democrat Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut says he will introduce legislation to reform the system, calling it “safety on the cheap.”

Senator Blumenthal says Boeing rushed to get the 737 Max into the air to compete with Europe’s Airbus, so critical safety features were disregarded. “There needs to be rigorous reform so the FAA is put back in charge of safety,” he says.

———

4:05 p.m.

Acting Federal Aviation Administrator Daniel Elwell tells a Senate subcommittee that to his knowledge, pilots were not given specific instructions on the Boeing 737 Max software that is under investigation as a cause of crashes in Ethiopia and Indonesia.

Elwell says the Max was an update to the previous generation 737 with a system called the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, or MCAS, to correct for small modifications and make it fly like the older planes. He says the plane has larger engines that were moved forward on the wings, and the nose wheel was extended 6 inches.

He says U.S., Canadian and European pilots flew the new and older planes in simulators, and unanimously agreed that the Max performed similarly and that additional flight training wasn’t needed.

The FAA originally retained oversight of the MCAS system but eventually turned it over to Boeing, he said.

———

3:40 p.m.

Boeing says it doesn’t see a need to overhaul the way it develops airplanes based on two recent crashes of its new 737 Max that killed a total of 346 people.

The company issued its comments as pilots, regulators and airline executives were gathering at a Boeing facility to learn more about how it is addressing the crashes.

Boeing said it hopes to issue a software update to address a crucial flight-control program that is suspected of playing a role in the Oct. 29 crash of a Lion Air jet in Indonesia and the March 10 crash of an Ethiopian Airlines Max. The company said that once the Federal Aviation Administration certifies the software fix, it would take about a day to deploy it and then an hour to install it on the planes.

Boeing said the process by which it designs, develops and tests planes has led to safer and safer air travel, and it sees no reason to overhaul it.

———

3:10 p.m.

Texas Senator Ted Cruz says the Boeing 737 Max crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia and reports about how the plane was approved by the Federal Aviation Administration have shaken the public’s confidence.

The Republican opened a hearing on air safety Wednesday by the Senate Commerce Committee’s aviation subcommittee. Cruz, who chairs the subcommittee, says the crashes have raised questions about FAA oversight of how airplanes are certified to fly.

Cruz noted the “close relationship between industry and regulators” as a factor threatening to erode the confidence of the flying public. He says the committee needs to understand what happened with the crashes, how the FAA determined that the Max was airworthy, and “take action to keep something like these tragic crashes from occurring again.”

Cruz says commercial aviation currently is as safe as it’s ever been, but reports of lax oversight are frustrating. “We need to do better and I believe that we can,” he said.

Committee Chairman Roger Wicker, R-Mississippi, says the committee will hold a second hearing with representatives of Boeing and others from outside government.

———

12:20 p.m.

Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao is defending President Donald Trump and blamed Congress for what she calls a delay in nominating a permanent head of the Federal Aviation Administration.

Sen. Richard Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois, asked Chao at a Senate appropriations hearing on Wednesday whether it was unusual that Trump took 14 months to propose a nominee to head the agency, which is under scrutiny for its oversight of Boeing after two crashes involving Boeing’s best-selling plane.

Chao said the process has been slowed by the White House and by Congress, but Durbin pointed out that Trump never sent a nominee to the Senate for consideration.

Chao said acting administrator Daniel Elwell was qualified to lead the agency. Elwell is a former military and airline pilot who had been the No. 2 official at FAA.

Elwell was bypassed when Trump this month announced he would nominate a former pilot and Delta Air Lines executive, Stephen Dickson, to head the FAA.

———

10:25 a.m.

Southwest Airlines says that the government’s grounding of all Boeing Max 8 jets will contribute to a $150 million revenue loss in the first quarter.

The airline says it had to cancel about 2,800 flights due to the groundings. According to numbers from Boeing, Southwest operates the largest fleet of the troubled planes.

The U.S. government followed nearly every other country in the world this month by ordering all Max 8 planes grounded after 157 people died in the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8. Another Max 8 crashed four months earlier in Indonesia, killing 189.

Southwest said in a filing Wednesday that it had to cancel an additional 6,600 flights from mid-February through the end of March due to weather and unscheduled maintenance.

The Senate is holding hearings Wednesday to look into the Federal Aviation Administration’s oversight of Boeing.

The Transportation Department’s inspector general, Calvin Scovel, is scheduled to testify and is expected to reveal plans to significantly revamp the FAA’s oversight of airplane construction.

———

9:45 a.m.

Congressional hearings into the Federal Aviation Administration’s oversight of Boeing before and after two deadly crashes of its 737 Max, which claimed a total of 346 lives, will begin in several hours.

Among those expected to testify before the Senate aviation subcommittee Wednesday is the Transportation Department’s inspector general, who is leading a review of the FAA and Boeing. Calvin Scovel is expected to reveal plans to significantly revamp the FAA’s oversight of airplane construction.

Acting FAA Administrator Daniel Elwell will testify that Boeing submitted an application on Jan. 21 spelling out changes it planned to make to crucial flight-control software on the 737 Max — the same system that is suspected of playing a role in the Oct. 29 crash of a Lion Air jet in Indonesia and the March 10 plunge of an Ethiopian Airlines Max.

The Transportation Department watchdog has previously raised questions about the FAA’s certification of Boeing planes and the seemingly close relationship between some agency managers and Boeing.

Airlines for America Forecasts Spring Air Travel to Rise to All-Time High

WASHINGTON, March 25, 2019 – Airlines for America (A4A), the industry trade organization for the leading U.S. airlines, is expecting an all-time high of 158.2 million passengers – 2.59 million per day – to fly globally on U.S. airlines between March 1 and April 30. This marks a 4.3 percent increase from the same period last year when 151.7 passengers took to the skies. Because of this record-high spring season, domestic airlines are adding 129,000 additional seats per day across their networks to accommodate 106,000 more daily passengers.

“Low fares, abundant air service and a healthy economy continue to attract a record number of travelers to the skies,” said A4A Vice President and Chief Economist John Heimlich. “We’re in a period of unprecedented access to air travel – flyers of all income levels have a wide array of products and providers to choose from when traveling from one city to another or one country to another.”

In 2018, U.S. airlines transported record passenger and cargo volumes. Department of Transportation (DOT) data through the third quarter of 2018 showed inflation-adjusted airfares falling to new lows, as airlines across the spectrum added capacity faster than the economy and competition intensified in tens of thousands of domestic city pairs.

More Americans Are Taking to the Skies than Ever

As the U.S. economy continues to grow, Americans are taking to the skies and reporting high overall satisfaction with their flight experience.

In 2018, according to A4A-commissioned research by Ipsos Public Affairs, 87 percent of Americans reported having flown in their lifetimes, up from 81 percent in 1997 and just 49 percent in 1971. Nearly 50 percent reported having flown at least once in the past year, up from 39 percent in 1997. A majority of Americans reported they are traveling by air for personal reasons (72 percent), including vacations. The research also showed that overall flyer satisfaction in 2018 remained above 80 percent, with even higher levels for those enrolled in a trusted traveler program such as Global Entry or TSA PreCheck.

U.S. Airlines Continue to Invest in Products, Employees and Airports

With growing demand, U.S. airlines are taking steps to ensure that passenger satisfaction remains high from check-in to touchdown, with increased levels of staffing, product enhancement and collaboration with airport partners.

From 2010 to 2018, U.S. airlines invested 75 percent of operating cash back into the product, while retiring debt and returning cash to shareholders. Nearly $121 billion was used to enhance the product and improve the passenger experience, with new airplanes and ground equipment, improved facilities, complimentary in-flight entertainment options, upgraded security lanes at airport checkpoints, innovative technology as well as more gourmet food and beverage choices.

December 2018 marked the 62nd consecutive month of year-over-year U.S. passenger airline employment gains. In 2018, on average, the industry employed 438,000 full-time equivalent workers – up nearly 16 percent from 2010 – with competitive pay and benefits in career-track jobs.

Airport investment is booming across the country, with numerous capital projects completed, underway or approved at a significant number of small, medium and major U.S. airports. From 2001 through 2017, U.S. airports spent $165 billion on capital improvement projects, and tens of billions of dollars in additional airport projects are underway or approved at airports around the country.

A4A has long advocated against raising taxes on the flying public, citing the many highly-funded resources available to airports for new projects, including $3.3 billion in revenue from the Passenger Facility Charge (PFC) in 2017 alone, more than $14.5 billion in unrestricted cash reserves and investments and the funds available through the Airport and Airway Trust Fund (AATF), which has an uncommitted balance of nearly $7 billion, growing to a record $8.7 billion by the end of 2020. Airports, thanks to these funds and other financial investments from airline partners, have no need to increase the tax burden on travelers who choose to fly.

U.S. Airlines Report Strong 2018 Operational Performance

Even with record high passenger volumes in 2018, U.S. airlines reported solid operational performance for the year, including the lowest rate of involuntary denied boardings -ever recorded, down to 0.14 per 10,000 passengers. The rate of customer complaints fell for a third straight year, with less than 1 complaint to DOT per 100,000 passengers. Baggage handling also remains improved since 2015, with reports of 2.78 mishandled bags per 1,000 passengers. Amid difficult severe weather in 2018, which the FAA reported rose 18 percent from 2017 alone, the on-time arrival rate fell to 79.4 percent.

U.S. airlines recovered $0.73 in revenue for every $1.00 increase in operating costs, including a 58 percent year-over-year increase in fuel costs. 2018 expenses rose faster than revenues, reducing the industry’s pretax profit margin to 8.2 percent, just over half of the U.S. average of 15.2 percent.