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Should the Government Reregulate the Airline Industry?

by Allen Howell | 2 Comments | This entry was posted on Sep 02 2010

After the justice department approved the merger of Continental Airlines and United Airlines last Friday, Congressman James Oberstar (D-Minn) voiced his displeasure again  with the merger and suggested that Congress might just need to reconsider the deregulation of airlines that happened in 1978.

The airlines have been stuck between a rock and a hard place for years. Combined profits of the industry are non-existent and customer satisfaction with airline service is somewhere down there in the range of our approval ratings of congress’s performance.

What we have received from deregulation are cheap air fares. Most people don’t remember what it cost to fly on the airlines prior to 1978 because they were either not old enough or did not fly on the airlines back then due to the costs. Real costs for flying via commercial airlines have come down over the past 30 years but the by product of lower fares has been a reduction in what we consider to be service and the amenities of air travel. In some ways airline travel has become just another form of mass transit much like rail service.

What we want we can’t have, and the government stepping in will not solve the problem.

We want our cheap $99 return fares, anywhere, anytime, and we want great service and convenient on time departure schedules to go with the low price.

Deregulation brought on the competition with low cost carriers, which brought down the fares that we all enjoy.

Low fares combined with volatile fuel prices, worldwide competition with lower labor costs and airlines irrationally putting too much inventory of seats in the market took the profits out of the airline industry.

So now we have to adjust to some new fare structure and service level that the free market should work out. Mergers of air carriers are a part of this evolutionary process.

The airlines and their shareholders deserve to make a profit, or at least attempt to do so, while providing air transportation to the consumer. Unlike a utility where we have no choice, we don’t have to fly if we don’t like the combination of price, service and time efficiency of air travel.

As my Southwest flight pulled into the gate Sunday afternoon at Nashville, the flight attendant reminded us that we have many choices about who we fly with and he thanked us for choosing Southwest Airlines. In reality we have choices beyond whom we fly with because we can drive and in some cases take the train. We can also choose not to go at all.  

Regulation of air travel from the federal government should be limited to matters of safety. Congress should not venture anymore than they already have into the regulation of customer service, pricing and competition. 

Government intervention has not brought much value to anything lately and I can’t imagine a scenario where reregulation of the airline industry will ultimately benefit the US economy and the consumer of air travel.

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Apex Brasil, Chicago, and Indy Racing

by Allen Howell | 0 Comments | This entry was posted on Sep 01 2010

Apex Brasil (The Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency) was created by the government of Brasil to promote companies in Brasil to the international market. To promote Brazilian companies here in the US they have become a major sponsor of the Indy Racing Series. They do an excellent job with connecting their businesses through the face to face networking of events like these races.

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GA Contributes on the Ground

by Jon Anne Doty | 3 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 29 2010

What is General Aviation? Mainstream media tells you that it is toys for the super-wealthy, chariots for the elite, excess for pampered executives. Our purpose with Plane Conversations is to tell you that mainstream media is (we’ll be generous here) mistaken.

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Where and What to Eat in Sao Jose dos Campos

by Bill Minkoff | 0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 28 2010

Brazil offers great food that can be found sometimes in unexpected places. Here are a few in Sao Jose dos Campos.

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Hawker Beech Factory Tour: Made in America

by Allen Howell | 1 Comment | This entry was posted on Aug 27 2010

The King Air series aircraft are without argument the most successful turboprop ever built with a production run spanning 5 decades. King Airs are in service worldwide with businesses, governments and individuals.

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Do Good Noise Abatement Rules Make Good Neighbors?

by Jon Anne Doty | 3 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 24 2010

Airplanes are noisy. No kidding, right? So why do people buy houses right next to them, then complain about the noise?

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EARNING MY WINGS (PART 8)

by Rachel Charlize | 0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 22 2010

I haven’t written a blog in some time, and that really goes to show I’ve been busily trying to finish up my private pilot.  A few weeks ago I was studying fanatically for my written test.  Not being one who likes to “have my head in the books” (I learn better by doing), I pushed [...]

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Falcon 7: Book Review

by Allen Howell | 0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 21 2010

I recently finished reading Falcon 7 – the new novel by best selling author James Huston. His last book, Marine One, made the NYT best seller list. I needed to try out my I-Pad book reader and Apple has this one in their book store so this was the book to try out the I-Pad reader.

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Booking Flights on Facebook?

by Allen Howell | 5 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 19 2010

You can now book a flight on Facebook on Delta Airlines Facebook page and tell your friends about it without ever leaving Facebook. Could Business Aviation and the Air Charter Industry use these same tools to reach the market in a postive and social way?

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Safety in Greener Skies

by Jon Anne Doty | 0 Comments | This entry was posted on Aug 17 2010

How do we protect ourselves from vulnerabilities in the very technology we use to make our flights more efficient?

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