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Found on today's Drudge Report
NEW YORK: The summer travel season is building toward its Labor Day peak in the United States, and fliers are growing ever angrier about delays. Now, the beleaguered airline industry is trying to shift the blame onto an unlikely villain: corporate jets, which the airlines claim are literally crowding passenger planes out of the sky. In what is shaping up as a smackdown between two of the least popular constituencies out there - airlines and corporate chieftains - the argument over the delays plaguing airports across America this summer is quickly taking a populist turn. It is a delicious twist. After all, the airlines themselves have been on the receiving end of populist outrage, especially after delays that stranded passengers for hours in overcrowded airliners. But now the industry's lobbying group in Washington, the Air Transport Association, has charged that the explosive growth of corporate jets is the real culprit. The reality is that the root causes of the delays are manifold - airports with little or no spare capacity, a 1950s air traffic control system, and burgeoning demand for direct flights to smaller cities. And the people who own and use private jets are quick to say that airlines are offering them up as scapegoats... http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=7257326 |
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![]() And the people who own and use private jets are quick to say that airlines are offering them up as scapegoats... http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=7257326 Blame-shifting, its the American way! Of course the airlines want to cover up their ineptitude by blaming corporate jets. The bottlenecks aren't enroute, it is at the airports. Most corporate jets don't land at the airline hubs, they use smaller fields. |
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"Gattman" wrote:
Found on today's Drudge Report .... The reality is that the root causes of the delays are manifold - airports with little or no spare capacity, a 1950s air traffic control system, and burgeoning demand for direct flights to smaller cities. I'd blame the hub-and-spoke model entirely. Everything else follows from that choice. Ironically direct flights between cities would be a more efficient use of the NAS. Direct flights would also free up capacity and reduce crowding at the current spoke airports. Thanks to the hub-and-spoke model I've been in the airports of many large cities and yet have never been outside those airports to see those cities from the ground. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoke-h...ution_paradigm |
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Bob Noel wrote:
In article .com, wrote: And the people who own and use private jets are quick to say that airlines are offering them up as scapegoats... http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=7257326 Blame-shifting, its the American way! Of course the airlines want to cover up their ineptitude by blaming corporate jets. The bottlenecks aren't enroute, it is at the airports. Most corporate jets don't land at the airline hubs, they use smaller fields. plus, is it really the airlines at fault when NIMBY rules? Yes it is. The airlines have chosen the Hub and Spoke system which concentrates all the aircraft into a few airports at pretty much the same times. Blaming the NIMBY crowd would only work if you think the airlines would be willing to flying to both North and South Whereeverville when they are now just flying into Whereeverville. |
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wrote:
And the people who own and use private jets are quick to say that airlines are offering them up as scapegoats... http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=7257326 Blame-shifting, its the American way! Of course the airlines want to cover up their ineptitude by blaming corporate jets. The bottlenecks aren't enroute, it is at the airports. Most corporate jets don't land at the airline hubs, they use smaller fields. I saw a neat rebuttal recently that placed the blame on the airlines for switching from fewer large jets to many regional jets. It was actually the most logical explanation I've seen as the RJs DO use the same airports as the big jets and they are bringing the masses to and from those jets. Matt |
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Matt Whiting wrote in
: wrote: And the people who own and use private jets are quick to say that airlines are offering them up as scapegoats... http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=7257326 Blame-shifting, its the American way! Of course the airlines want to cover up their ineptitude by blaming corporate jets. The bottlenecks aren't enroute, it is at the airports. Most corporate jets don't land at the airline hubs, they use smaller fields. I saw a neat rebuttal recently that placed the blame on the airlines for switching from fewer large jets to many regional jets. It was actually the most logical explanation I've seen as the RJs DO use the same airports as the big jets and they are bringing the masses to and from those jets. Matt IIRC, this article was in the Wall Street Journal about a week ago or so. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#8
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Marty Shapiro wrote:
Matt Whiting wrote in : wrote: And the people who own and use private jets are quick to say that airlines are offering them up as scapegoats... http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=7257326 Blame-shifting, its the American way! Of course the airlines want to cover up their ineptitude by blaming corporate jets. The bottlenecks aren't enroute, it is at the airports. Most corporate jets don't land at the airline hubs, they use smaller fields. I saw a neat rebuttal recently that placed the blame on the airlines for switching from fewer large jets to many regional jets. It was actually the most logical explanation I've seen as the RJs DO use the same airports as the big jets and they are bringing the masses to and from those jets. Matt IIRC, this article was in the Wall Street Journal about a week ago or so. That may well be where I saw it, but I read a lot of different publications and they blur together after a week or two! It was a well reasoned article in my opinion, much better than some of those preceding it. Matt |
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