Feds’ plan to cap N.Y. flights halted

Cox New York Correspondent

Thursday, September 04, 2008

New York —- Flight delayed? Waiting an hour on the runway? Wondering who or what to blame? The government’s suggestion: New York.

The Big Apple’s three major airports have the nation’s worst delays. Since so many flights pass through that air space, the effects ripple across the country, the Transportation Department says.

To address the problems, federal officials have capped the number of New York flights and want to auction takeoff and landing slots to boost competition and efficient use of the airports.

Those plans have sparked fierce opposition from airlines, politicians and the airports: John F. Kennedy International, LaGuardia and Newark Liberty International in New Jersey. The industry group for airlines is suing to stop the auctions, saying they are unlawful and will result in higher ticket prices.

The first auctions had been scheduled for two slots at Newark’s airport on Wednesday, but the Federal Aviation Administration put those plans on hold last week under mounting pressure.

“It’s an embarrassing moment,” said Michael Boyd, president of the Boyd Group aviation consulting firm. He called the Transportation Department’s handling of the proposals “absolutely amateur” and said the auction plans fail to address real problems.

“There is no cohesive program in the works to fix the air traffic control system,” Boyd said.

The five most delayed flights in July were Comair planes to or from JFK, the DOT said Wednesday. Comair, the regional subsidiary of Atlanta’s Delta Air Lines, and New York-based JetBlue Airways had the worst on-time arrival rates in July.

However, overall the nation’s airlines were on time more often compared to a year ago.

In December, the Bush administration announced flight caps for New York airports, saying airlines would cut the number of flights in and out during the busiest hours.

The Transportation Department later unveiled plans for slot auctions intended to prevent the caps from causing economic harm.

“We need a way to keep aviation competition alive,” Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said in May. “Our plan strikes a sound balance between protecting investments by incumbent carriers, ensuring that all airlines have the opportunity to fly … and improving service, choice and fares for travelers.”

Since then, criticism has escalated.

The Air Transport Association industry group filed its lawsuit last month to stop the auctions.

“The FAA’s efforts to impose a significant new aviation tax through a slot auction scheme are an outrage and are illegal,” Delta spokesman KentLanders said.

JetBlue has called the plans a “direct tax on our customers” that doesn’t improve the air traffic control system.


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