Midwest Airlines announces cut to schedule
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Yahoo! Buzz Digg Newsvine Reddit FacebookWhat's this?MILWAUKEE (AP) Citing the struggle with rising fuel costs, Midwest Airlines has announced it will cut its flight schedule, dropping flights to leisure destinations and retaining departures to core business destinations on which the company built its base.
The changes roll back the Milwaukee-based service to levels that existed at the start of the decade before a recession and the 2001 terrorist attacks.
Flights to San Diego, as well as Fort Lauderdale, and Fort Myers., Fla. will be cut entirely. Tampa will be the only Florida city retaining year-round service from Midwest.
Nonstop flights to Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle will also be dropped. Those flights will now stop in Kansas City, Mo., where the airline will pick up additional fuel and passengers.
Midwest Connect service will be cut to Baltimore; Hartford, Conn.; Louisville; Raleigh/Durham, N.C.; and St. Louis.
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Several cities will see no change. Departures to Atlanta; Boston; Denver; Minneapolis; New York; Philadelphia; Phoenix; Pittsburgh, Tampa; and Washington, D.C., will remain the same.
Midwest Airlines spokesman Michael Brophy said the airline will do its best to rebook passengers who have bought tickets for flights that are being canceled, and refunds passengers who can't be rebooked.
The changes take effect Sept. 8, and come on top of planned job cuts at the airline.
By the numbers, the cuts will leave Midwest with 90 daily departures to 28 cities, down from 118 departures to 38 cities, from Mitchell, where Midwest Airlines and its Midwest Connect regional affiliate are dominant carriers. Systemwide, the new schedule will leave Midwest Airlines/Midwest Connect with 102 daily departures, down from 138.
The service cuts come out to a service reduction of about 30% or 40%, depending on whether the cuts are measured by passenger capacity or flight miles, said Randy Smith, vice president of sales and distribution.
The company indicated there would be schedule cuts last month, when it said it was phasing out a dozen MD-80 jets. The MD-80s, which make up roughly one-third of the Midwest Airlines fleet, use more fuel than the carrier's 25 Boeing 717 jets.
With the new schedule, two Boeing 717s are being dropped from the fleet.
Last week, the company announced it was cutting 1,200 jobs about 40% of its 3,000-plus work force. The cuts affect pilots, flight attendants, mechanics and ground crews.
Midwest Air is also seeking steep pay cuts from its union flight crews and new terms from the company's creditors, as it tries to avoid filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy