REFERENCE CENTER: Learn More or Log in
        Search the Business Travel News Archives
ABOUT US | CONTACT US | ADVERTISING OPS | LICENSING OPS | SUBSCRIBE | NEWSLETTERS | SITE MAP | RSS
Business Travel News by Industry
Airline News
Hotel News
Car Rental News
Chauffeured Transportation News
Corporate Payment Systems News
Travel Management News
Travel Management Technology News
Business Travel News Global
Meetings News
Destinations News
Business Travel Industry Resources
Black Book: Key Industry Contact Listings
facility search
digital resources
webcasts





Ads by Google



AIRLINE NEWS

SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT | MOST POPULAR | RSS | REPRINTS


Cutting Flights And Jobs, US Airways Narrows Network

By Jay Boehmer

OCTOBER 28, 2009 -- US Airways is realigning its U.S. network to focus almost exclusively on service to and from its Charlotte, Philadelphia and Phoenix hubs and three other cities, which by the end of 2010 will represent 99 percent of the airline's capacity, down from about 93 percent today. The carrier today also said it would abandon a number of markets, lay off about 1,000 workers and suspend indefinitely its right to serve Beijing.

In addition to its three hubs, US Airways today said it would preserve or bolster its presence at Boston Logan and Ronald Reagan Washington National airports and on shuttle markets from New York's LaGuardia Airport.

Chairman and CEO Doug Parker in a memo today said, "By concentrating on our strengths we will be better positioned to return US Airways to profitability."

As part of the realignment that will take shape over the next year, US Airways will reduce Las Vegas service from 64 to 36 daily departures in the next four months, while closing operations in Colorado Springs, Colo., and Wichita, Kan.

US Airways also pointed to "weakness in transatlantic revenue" in its plan to cease service from Philadelphia to Birmingham, U.K.; London Gatwick; Milan, Italy; Shannon, Ireland; and Stockholm, Sweden. The carrier, however, said it would begin offering year-round services to Brussels and Zurich, which currently are seasonal.

US Airways also said it would return to the U.S. Department of Transportation its authority to serve Beijing from Philadelphia, though the carrier said it could reapply for the service authority.

"As we evaluated our international routes in Philadelphia, we made the necessary decisions to pull down capacity that simply isn't profitable in today's economic environment," Parker said, "However, we remain firmly committed to exploring additional opportunities as the economy slowly recovers, including reevaluating our proposed China service in the future."

As part of the moves, US Airways said it would eliminate about 1,000 airport, pilot and flight attendant positions in the first half of next year, while closing crew bases in Boston, LaGuardia and Las Vegas.

US Airways said it remains committed to service—and even some growth—in Charlotte, Philadelphia and Washington National, and those other focus markets.

Though US Airways is scaling back Philadelphia service to "some softer markets," the carrier said it has grown into "markets where demand is strong," including the recent launch of Tel Aviv service and expansion of Oslo service. The carrier said it plans to add service from Charlotte to Honolulu and Rio de Janeiro in December.

Citing its still-pending slot swap with Delta Air Lines (BTNonline, Aug. 12), US Airways also recommitted to growth at Washington National, which includes the addition of eight new markets, including Birmingham, Ala., Islip, N.Y., Ithaca, N.Y., Little Rock, Ark., Myrtle Beach, S.C., Pensacola, Fla., Savannah, Ga. and Tallahassee, Fla.


SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT | MOST POPULAR | RSS | REPRINTS
SUBSCRIBE TO BUSINESS TRAVEL NEWS»


REFERENCE CENTER

PREMIUM RESEARCH

Register or Log-In for access to BTN's
premium in-depth research. Learn More

2009 Corporate Travel 100
The latest on the travel programs of 100 largest U.S. air travel spenders and BTN's Best Practitioners of 2008.

2009 Business Travel Buyer's Handbook
Everything your organization needs to know in order to set up and manage a corporate travel program.

2008 Corporate Travel Index 2009 Business Travel Survey
Annual review of supplier performance in every key corporate travel segment.

2008 Corporate Travel Index 2009 Corporate Travel Index
Per diems for 100 U.S. and 100 international business destinations.

FREE RESOURCES

2009 Large Market Benchmarking Report
Analyzing companies that spend between $10 million and $40 million in annual U.S. booked air volume. Sponsored in part by Diners Club International.

Procurement Practices 2009
The application of procurement metrics to travel management, and the measurement of their effectiveness. Sponsored in part by American Express.

The 2010 Black Book The 2010 Black Book
Start your online search for key supplier contacts in every sector of the corporate travel industry here, or take a look at the
Black Book digital edition.

Benchmarking Europe's Biggest 2009
The third annual Business Travel News/Association of Corporate Travel Executives benchmarking report of European travel management practices.

The 2008 Corporate Traveler
Measuring corporate travel policy compliance, service expectations and technology use. Sponsored in part by American Express Business Travel.

HIGHLIGHTED RESEARCH

The 25 Most Influential Executives Of The Business Travel Industry, 2008

BTN White Paper: Benchmarking Savings
View Report

The BTN Glossary: A new dictionary of business travel terminology.


SELECTED SURVEYS

2009 Travel Manager Salary & Attitude Survey
View Report

2009 U.S. Hotel Chain Survey
View Report

2009 BTN Annual Airline Survey
View Report




 
BTN WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
Stay on top of the week's top headlines and major breaking stories in corporate travel management.

© 2010 Nielsen Business Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms of Use  |  Privacy Policy