Southwest Airlines needs Your help Now!

arminnie

<font color=blue>Tossed the butter kept the gin<br
Joined
Aug 22, 2003
Messages
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I got this email from Southwest Airlines today and wanted to pass this along and give my perspective on it.

I lived in Dallas when the Wright Amendment was enacted. It was totally done as a political favor for Jim Wright (D) to help to protect the "new" Dallas Fort Worth Airport and also because American Airlines demanded it.

When DFW was built there was a lot of concern that anyone would want to travel WAY out in the country where it was built especially after having an airport right in the middle of the city (Love Field). DFW is decades old now and is certainly established itself by now.

Whether you like flying on Southwest or not, they are a very well run airline and have helped bring down airfares for consumers in the markets that they enter.

To have a federal law that prohibits flights from ONE city in Texas is ridiculous. It's the worst kind of special interest legislation and should be abolished.




[font=Arial, sans-serif]Southwest Airlines Needs Your Help Now![/font] [font=Arial, sans-serif]Wright Is Wrong! Set Love Free![/font]

[font=Arial, sans-serif]I am sending you this ALERT today to ask for your help. By now, you have probably heard about our fight to repeal the Wright Amendment, the 1979 law that makes it illegal to fly or advertise flights from Dallas Love Field to points beyond the four states surrounding Texas, plus Alabama, Mississippi, and Kansas. We need your help to make this happen![/font]

[font=Arial, sans-serif]The Wright Amendment has a strong history of stifling competition and creating high fares. Simply put, the Wright Amendment is Wrong! It's time to Set Love Free and repeal this archaic, antiquated law now! Southwest wants to bring you low fares and Legendary Customer Service from Love Field to many of the 60 cities that we currently serve across the nation.[/font]

[font=Arial, sans-serif]Please join our efforts to Set Love Free by visiting our web site: setlovefree.com to take action now. You can help by:[/font]

[font=Arial, sans-serif]Contacting Your Elected Officials[/font]

[font=Arial, sans-serif]Encourage your federal legislators to please support the Right to Fly Act (HR 2646) introduced in the House by Texas Congressmen Jeb Hensarling and Sam Johnson that will immediately remove the Wright Amendment restrictions on Dallas Love Field Airport, or any companion legislation that might be introduced into the Senate. The "Write Congress" feature is on the home page of setlovefree.com.[/font]

[font=Arial, sans-serif]Thank you for taking action now to repeal the Wright Amendment. We have always been able to count on you, our loyal Customers. Please accept my heartfelt thanks for helping us Set Love Free![/font]

[font=Arial, sans-serif]LUV,[/font]
rreu_ccb_signature.gif

[font=Arial, sans-serif]Colleen C. Barrett
President, Southwest Airlines
[/font]
 
I hope the effort to lift the restriction will be successful...good luck to you!
When SW expanded their direct flights to MCO from MDW after the ATA deal, I was worried that rates would go up since ATA left the market. The opposite has happened; SW is offering ridiculously great deals. For them to be excluded from a market because of an amendment done as a favor to someone is crazy and is probably costing extra money to flyers.
Barb
 
Sorry but American did not demand it. It was to help the overall region.
Yes AA is on the other side now lobbying against repeal. Im against repeal but not because I work for AA, but because a deal is a deal.
If it is repealed, Southwest should be forced to give up thier monopoly at Love. They own over 90% of the market there. AA will go to court to abolish the master plan and develop a hub there as well. When that happens, there will be less service to some cities and some cities will no longer be served. There will be more traffic in and around love field.

Here it what the author of the Wright Ammendment had to say.

Requires registration, but below is the copied and pasted version.
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/opinion/12041776.htm

A deal is a deal

By Jim Wright

Special to the Star-Telegram


After spending 35 years in Congress, I long ago lost count of the number of sundry amendments I offered to various bills. Surely more than 100 of them became law. But these days, whenever people in Texas ask me to explain "the Wright Amendment," I know the one they mean.

That law was a 1979 effort to keep faith with the people of Fort Worth and Dallas, whose cities had acted in unison to build -- with the help of some $96 million from the federal government -- a truly world-class airport.

Our government had granted that money and its official sanction on the clearly stated condition that both cities pass legal ordinances permanently closing Dallas Love Field and Fort Worth's Meacham Field and Greater Southwest International Airport to all commercial passenger traffic.

Both city councils had done precisely that. Wanting something far better, safer, more modern and more serviceable for everyone in the region, they formally shut down the two old nearby airports to all but private flights.

Greater Southwest, an earlier attempt to popularize a midway airport for the two cities, would be subsumed as a sort of southerly appendage to the new Dallas/Fort Worth Airport, and it of course would no longer independently originate any commercial passenger flights.

The Federal Aviation Administration correctly foresaw the growth of long-distance and international travel, requiring larger and larger aircraft with longer radius-of-maneuver requirements that would create dangerously overlapping takeoff and landing patterns if both D/FW and Love were initializing passenger flights in large aircraft.

Concerned for safety and fearful of aerial traffic jams, the FAA demanded wider separation than the close physical proximity of Love and D/FW runways.

FAA spokesmen insisted, before signing off on the ambitious development plans for D/FW, that commercial passenger service at Love, Meacham and Greater Southwest be terminated altogether.

Those conditions having been met by the closing of the two old commercial airports, bonds were sold, guaranteeing their purchasers -- in writing, on the good faith and credit of the two cities -- that there would be no commercial passenger flights at Love, Greater Southwest or Meacham.

In 1974, residents of our two largest cities and other nearby towns celebrated the grand opening of D/FW Airport. It was a triumph of reason over greed, we told one another. It proved that we'd outgrown our childish feuds and finally buried our hatchets -- elsewhere than in one another's skulls.

Progressive leadership in both towns hailed the dawn of cooperation to drive away the long night of feuding. That old rivalry had fed for more than a century on a colorful if flinty-hearted past.

In the days when wagon trains were bringing settlers westward, Dallas merchants would regale westbound migrants with lurid tales of mortal danger and/or lethal boredom that lay in wait to devour them if they ventured as far as Fort Worth. They'd be scalped by Indians, eaten alive by wild animals or condemned to terminal stagnation.

Fort Worth, aside from being dangerous, was described as already dead itself -- so sleepy, according to one warning, that a panther had been seen dozing languidly in the middle of a downtown street.

To counter this verbal roadblock, Fort Worth organized teams of outriders to intercept the wagon trains east of Dallas and escort them to Fort Worth by a circuitous route that skirted any sight of the rival village.

Both towns whetted their competitive skills and reveled overly long in the two-way surfeit of one-upmanship.

When Dallas in 1936 hosted a yearlong exposition in honor of the Texas Centennial, Fort Worth countered with a gaudy Frontier Exposition of its own.

"Come to Dallas for culture," Fort Worth sloganeered, "but come to Fort Worth for fun."

An earlier attempt to operate a mutual airport had faltered in the late 1940s and early '50s. Runways had been located meticulously halfway between Fort Worth's Texas Hotel corner and the Adolphus Hotel corner in Dallas. Then Dallas discovered that the terminal building would face west from the centerline toward Fort Worth, and the deal was off!

Legend says that Fort Worth's No. 1 booster, publishing icon Amon G. Carter, carried his lunch in a paper sack when going to Dallas to avoid patronizing any Dallas eatery. And Dallas' merchant prince, Stanley Marcus, refused to order merchandise from any company whose salesman had flown into the midway airport, known variously as "Greater Southwest Regional Airport" and "Amon Carter Field."

But in 1974, we all mutually rejoiced that we were, at last, singing from the same hymn book and working together!

In this euphoric spirit, things rested -- until the intercession of a state agency known as the Texas Aeronautics Commission. That now-defunct commission, on being petitioned by Southwest Airlines, ordered Dallas to reopen Love Field for use by Southwest, which then was headed by Lamar Muse.

The state commission's edict had to be obeyed by the cited city, but it had no jurisdiction outside Texas.

If Southwest had wanted to establish out-of-state schedules, it could have done so by flying from D/FW, just as all the other airlines were doing. At the time, however, Southwest was principally interested in launching flights linking Dallas, Houston and San Antonio.

Meanwhile, freed from certain landing fees that helped pay off the D/FW bonds, Southwest adopted "no-frill" service, advertised low rates and began to flourish. Its owners began to dream of interstate flights.

All its Love Field destinations were in Texas. Invited to use D/FW, the management expressed little interest.

Then came 1978. A movement -- quietly supported by the economically dominant airlines and a group of laissez-faire economists -- to deregulate U.S. aviation was gathering steam.

From the birth of the federally subsidized industry, scheduled passenger flights and fares had been approved and closely monitored in the interest of the flying public by the Civil Aeronautics Board, just as safety matters were monitored by the FAA. The CAB saw to it that all markets were served, that fares were reasonable and that no airline was allowed to monopolize service.

President Carter, somewhat surprisingly, endorsed the concept of deregulation. A bill to effectively abolish the CAB's work swept through the House. Suddenly, prevailing aviation laws would expire, and we'd simply let any airline fly from and to wherever it wished and charge whatever fares it might choose.

Civic leaders, frequent travelers, mayors and city council members from Fort Worth and Dallas saw this as a potential danger to D/FW's contractual agreements. If any company could fly anywhere it wanted out of a reopened Love Field, this could easily renew all the old cutthroat battles that the international airport had been created to settle.

In 1979, this group of concerned citizens came to me for help.

My original amendment, the one that initially passed the House, would have prohibited any interstate commercial passenger flights to or from any airport within a 20-mile radius of D/FW. It was enthusiastically supported by the official leadership of Fort Worth and Dallas.

It set off, however, a massive lobbying effort in the Senate, which rejected the amendment as written and called for a conference committee to resolve differences.

It was at this point that my office participated in discussions with every party at interest, seeking a solution that everyone would recognize as fair. Through these negotiations, we ultimately reached an agreement that all parties embraced.

It allowed Love Field to serve interstate traffic limited to turnaround service between Love and the contiguous states: Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico. This restriction applied equally to Southwest and all airlines.

Southwest was not singled out in any way.

Herb Kelleher -- founder, legal counsel and longtime leader of Southwest -- expressed satisfaction. He'd won a significant victory. And he was welcome, even overtly encouraged, to expand into other states with longer-range flights into and out of D/FW Airport.

Southwest is still welcome there. That Southwest has chosen not to accept the invitation has been entirely of its own volition.

That's about all there is to the "Wright Amendment." This compromise was designed to be in perpetuity, to settle once and for all this very divisive issue.

Although I was not personally involved in all of the negotiations with the parties, which included the Dallas and Fort Worth city councils, affected airlines and federal agency representatives, my office was represented in all of them.

It was well understood by each and every party, including Southwest Airlines, that this was an agreement that was to put this issue to rest once and for all, that all parties would abide by it and that none would attempt to unravel it.

At least, this was my understanding. My friend Herb Kelleher remembers it somewhat differently.

Herb, in my view, is a thoroughly honorable person. Who is to say that I am right and he is wrong?

I have no hostility toward Southwest. It offers splendid services -- well-run, on time, reasonably priced.

If its investors want to inaugurate long, cross-country flights from our market, that's fine with me. Just let them fly, like all the others, out of and into the airport that our region's taxpayers, and others, built for that precise purpose. Let them charge whatever fares they wish, be just as competitive as they can.

But we shouldn't need to pay for two international airports, or have to compromise regional passenger safety by overlapping takeoff and landing patterns.

Besides, a deal is a deal. And this one was a good deal.

A guy named Jim Wright has no proprietary ownership of this agreement. It was a compromise hammered out by a lot of people. Equally fair to everyone, it treats all airline carriers alike.

I don't have a current figure on just how much has been invested in D/FW Airport, but I'll assure you of this: It's well into the billions. And I can't tell you how exactly much it has brought to the economies of our neighboring counties, but this is certain: It's in the multiple billions!

Every resident of North Texas has a big investment in D/FW Airport and both a financial and civic interest in its future.

Sometimes I wish I were as wise as Solomon. Then maybe I'd know how to make everybody happy with our human efforts to compromise and get along. Unfortunately, Solomon was not on the faculty at Weatherford College or the University of Texas when I was a student at those institutions.

Who knows? Even if I had enrolled in his course, I might have flunked it.
 
Isn't American still paying the lease on 3 gates from their experiment in flying F-100's fitted with 56 seats out of Love to New York, LA and DC? I know when Legend Airlines went out of business that left 6 gates open for use. Yes, Southwest has the great majority of flights out of Love (Continental Express has around a dozen daily flights to Houston), but there are gates available if other airlines want to move in to Love. I'm not sure how anyone can say that Southwest has a monopoly at Love, there are available gates and in fact, American is leasing gates it isn't even using. In light of American's financial condition, I have no idea how they could afford to "develop a hub" at Love.

I just don't see why the reluctance to repeal the Wright Amendment by AA, DFW and other airlines, other than the fear of increased competition or decreased market share.
 

gw_lit said:
I just don't see why the reluctance to repeal the Wright Amendment by AA, DFW and other airlines, other than the fear of increased competition or decreased market share.

BINGO! This amendment is basically to protect American airlines at this point in time, and that's why it should be repealed. If I worked for American or owned a significant amount of American stock - Yeah I'd want to keep it big time.

All of that stuff about protecting the airport is DECADES old, and just doesn't make sense any more. DFW is not going to go away. It no longer needs to be "protected" from Southwest.

When DFW was on the planning boards, LBJ freeway had not even been completed. There was relatively little population north of LBJ compared to now.The population has exploded in the DFW area and there are more people living closer to DFW than to Love field.

Southwest's presence in a market definitely helps bring down the cost of flying. When SW chose to fly only to Oakland and San Jose and dropped the San Francisco airport the airfare DOUBLED out of SFO for the remaining airlines and has remained so for the past 4-5 years.
 
The DEAL was to get DFW started and stable... guess what that is done.

AA is lobbying against this because they know that it will cost them money. Thier costs are higher and while I hate to say this with an AA employee posting.... in MOST cases AA's staff is ruder. (I personally try not to fly AA at all since I just got tired of being lied to and treated like a jerk... and I was a top tier flyer with them when this happened!)

And as for SW giving up the monopoly.... Nashville had to threaten to SUE AA to get them to give back the gates after they closed thier hub there. AA wanted to keep the gates and not use them to deny others the chance to use them. At least SW USES thier gates!
 





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