View Full Version : Female FAA leadership and PC warm and fuzzy gets you....................
FredGarvinMaleProstitute
September 26th 07, 05:41 PM
Based on the first seven months of 2007, Scovel's report
found more than 54,000 scheduled flights affecting nearly
3.7 million passengers experienced ground delays of 1 to 5
hours or more. That is an increase of nearly 42 percent over
2006.
Congress is considering legislation that would force
airlines to address the issue. Airlines oppose the measure,
saying lawmaker interference could do more harm than good.
Jim Carter[_1_]
September 27th 07, 01:39 AM
Cite please? I need this information to justify a corporate flying program.
--
Jim Carter
Rogers, Arkansas
"FredGarvinMaleProstitute" > wrote in message
...
> Based on the first seven months of 2007, Scovel's report found more than
> 54,000 scheduled flights affecting nearly 3.7 million passengers
> experienced ground delays of 1 to 5 hours or more. That is an increase of
> nearly 42 percent over 2006.
>
> Congress is considering legislation that would force airlines to address
> the issue. Airlines oppose the measure, saying lawmaker interference could
> do more harm than good.
FredGarvinMaleProstitute
September 27th 07, 02:22 AM
Jim Carter wrote:
> Cite please? I need this information to justify a corporate flying program.
>
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/09/25/flight.delays/
http://www.statesman.com/news/content/gen/ap/Airline_Delays_Hearing.html
http://www.aviationacrossamerica.org/pubs/Setting_the_Record.cfm
Gig 601XL Builder
September 27th 07, 04:28 PM
This might get you pointed in the right direction.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/tnBasicIndustries-SP/idUKN2542652320070926
Jim Carter wrote:
> Cite please? I need this information to justify a corporate flying
> program.
>> Based on the first seven months of 2007, Scovel's report found more
>> than 54,000 scheduled flights affecting nearly 3.7 million passengers
>> experienced ground delays of 1 to 5 hours or more. That is an
>> increase of nearly 42 percent over 2006.
>>
>> Congress is considering legislation that would force airlines to
>> address the issue. Airlines oppose the measure, saying lawmaker
>> interference could do more harm than good.
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