Obi-Wan Pinobi
<font color=red>Jedi moderator who likes to live o
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2001
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Click here for today's front-page article. It basically speculates on what could happen and the impact of US Airways shutting down on Virginia's airports. US Airways makes up about 1/3 of the traffic in Richmond and Norfolk, and quite a bit more in smaller airports.
The article does say the airports have been working on contingency plans -- other airlines in the market increasing service to pick up the slack or new airlines coming into the market to provide service.
I do have a question for airline professionals about this one quote --
The article does say the airports have been working on contingency plans -- other airlines in the market increasing service to pick up the slack or new airlines coming into the market to provide service.
I do have a question for airline professionals about this one quote --
Realistically, how quickly could things change? With airlines already serving Richmond like Delta or United, they already have the gate space and ground personnel, but they would still need more aircraft and more crewpeople to man the aircraft to provide service. Could they hire the former US Airways employees that quickly? Do the airlines make agreements between each other for contingencies like this? And how quickly could an airline that doesn't serve Richmond -- like Southwest or AirTran -- add service without gate space or ground personnel already in place?"If US Airways goes out, Richmond might have a decline in service for a week or two, but that would be it," said Darryl Jenkins, an industry consultant working with Richmond International.