Low-cost airlines seeking aid get break on minimum flight rule
The federal government ordered airlines accepting financial aid to maintain minimal service levels to cities they served before the Covid-19 pandemic ravaged the transportation system, but made adjustments for low-cost carriers and those that fly to some destinations only part of the year. The US DoT eased some requirements it made in a March 31 proposal after airlines and other industry groups asked for more flexibility, the department said in the order Tuesday. The final order was a regulatory win for ultra low-cost carriers such as Spirit and Allegiant, which would have been forced to make potentially hundreds of new flights beyond their normal schedules to satisfy the department’s initial proposed rule. Under the revisions, an airline that served a city less than five times weekly would need to provide only one weekly flight. For carriers with more than 25 weekly flights, they could trim their flying to five per week. The original proposal set required flights based on March 1 service, but the final DOT rule gave carriers that fly to some destinations for only portions of the year the flexibility to make seasonal changes.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2020-04-08/general/low-cost-airlines-seeking-aid-get-break-on-minimum-flight-rule
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/logo.png
Low-cost airlines seeking aid get break on minimum flight rule
The federal government ordered airlines accepting financial aid to maintain minimal service levels to cities they served before the Covid-19 pandemic ravaged the transportation system, but made adjustments for low-cost carriers and those that fly to some destinations only part of the year. The US DoT eased some requirements it made in a March 31 proposal after airlines and other industry groups asked for more flexibility, the department said in the order Tuesday. The final order was a regulatory win for ultra low-cost carriers such as Spirit and Allegiant, which would have been forced to make potentially hundreds of new flights beyond their normal schedules to satisfy the department’s initial proposed rule. Under the revisions, an airline that served a city less than five times weekly would need to provide only one weekly flight. For carriers with more than 25 weekly flights, they could trim their flying to five per week. The original proposal set required flights based on March 1 service, but the final DOT rule gave carriers that fly to some destinations for only portions of the year the flexibility to make seasonal changes.<br/>