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Bonza, an LCC in Australia that began flying last January, died a quiet death earlier this week. The airline is survived by the eight aircraft in its fleet which were repossessed, several hundred employees, and thousands of stranded travelers across Australia. Neither Qantas or Virgin Australia could be reached for comment as spokespeople for both carriers were laughing in-between telling reporters “I told you so.”
Qantas and Virgin Australia — which account for 95% of the domestic market (a number that just went up by a little bit) offered assistance to anyone stranded by Bonza — provided they had a working credit card.
The carrier had been the first new entrant into the Australian market since 2007, which, it turns out was for good reason. It chose a leisure focus amongst its routes, and chose not to compete with the big two or Rex between major cities and business centers, but it ended up not mattering in the end.
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We knew SAS would leave Star Alliance on August 31, but we didn’t know when it would join SkyTeam — until now. Concerns that the carrier would drift in an alliance-less stupor for days or weeks during a transition period were greatly exaggerated after it was announced SAS would formally join SkyTeam at the stroke of midnight September 1.
It’s expected to be a comprehensive transition for the carrier, meaning immediate chances for customers to earn and burn miles, have their baggage mishandled on a multi-airline itinerary, and have lounge agents mistakenly deny entry as soon as day one. After joining the alliance, SAS is expected to join the transatlantic JV, but that will take government approval and won’t happen right away.
The carrier will keep its EuroBonus program for now, but as Air France-KLM continues to grow its investment in the airline, the possibility exists for it to eventually transition to Flying Blue. Delta proposed SAS use SkyMiles as its mileage currency, but the carrier declined, saying its computers didn’t have the ability to “count that high.”
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Spirit is going right at both American and Delta with its latest route additions, adding service in Americans largest hub in Dallas/Fort Worth and Delta’s second largest in Detroit.
From DFW, Spirit will battle AA on five routes — Columbus (4x weekly), Kansas City (4x weekly), Memphis (3x weekly), Milwaukee (3x weekly), and San Antonio (2x weekly). While AA is the only carrier currently operating any of these five, Southwest operates to all five from its hub across town at Dallas/Love — making Spirit the third entrant on all five from the Metroplex.
In Detroit, Spirit will go against Delta on three new destinations: Charleston (4x weekly), Kansas City (3x weekly), and Nashville (daily). Delta is the only current carrier flying between Detroit and either Charleston or Kansas City, while both Delta and Southwest currently fly DTW – Nashville.
All eight new routes begin July 10 or 11, and introductory fares start at $0.99, but do come with a mandatory $199 new route fee.
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SkyWest Charter has gone to court to force the DOT to rule on its application to begin scheduled passenger ops, deciding that 19 months is long enough to wait to hear back from the government.
Before turning to the legal system, SkyWest was repeatedly told by the DOT that they were experiencing unusually high call volume, and that all applications were being handled in the order in which they were received — but at some point around the one year mark, SkyWest leadership began to question the recording. SkyWest Charter first applied to fly its CRJ200 fleet to 25 underserved routes in October 2022 but has not yet heard back.
The suit was filed in a Utah federal court where the St. George-based carrier hopes to move the process along more quickly with the backing of the courts. When asked to comment on the legal action, the DOT said that it was experiencing very high call volume and would get back to us in the order in which the request for comment was received.
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Avelo Airlines likes the sweet, sweet, smell of wine country, as the carrier has now opened its previously-announced aircraft base — its 6th — at Sonoma County Airport in Santa Rosa, California, adding four new destinations from the airport.
The cities receiving service are Boise, Pasco, Kalispell, and Salem, complementing the four existing destinations for Avelo from STS — Bend, Burbank, Las Vegas, and Palm Springs. With its new base at the airport, Avelo has hired 32 STS-based staff, with that number expected to climb to 50 before the end of the calendar year.
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Did you know it’s impossible to move your lips while smiling?
That’s not actually true, but at least you’re smiling now.