Airport Board Makes Slight Changes To Plan
Earlier this week,
JetBlue Airways went on record as being against the Wright
Amendment deal reached last month between the cities of Dallas and
Fort Worth, TX, Southwest Airlines, and American Airlines over the
future of flights from Dallas Love Field. On Thursday, founder and
CEO David Neeleman upped the ante... by asking lawmakers to block
the agreement.
The Dallas Morning News reports Neeleman sent a letter to the
leadership of the House Transportation Committee, saying the deal
would keep new airlines out of Love.
"The deal ... merely seeks to replace one outdated regulation
with a series of anticompetitive provisions that eliminate
competition and protect a few select carriers, while permanently
destroying one-third of all of the gates at a vital airport in a
major city, one that JetBlue wishes to serve if the Wright
amendment is repealed," Mr. Neeleman wrote.
"It creates nothing more than an anticompetitive and
discriminatory arrangement that protects two carriers by
permanently excluding all competitors, ultimately at the expense of
the traveling public in North Texas and across the nation," he
added. "You're destroying gates and denying access to airlines that
would like to serve there."

JetBlue wants two gates at Love Field if the Wright Amendment
restrictions are removed. In addition to Southwest, Continental
Airlines and American Airlines also currently operate gates at the
inner-city airport.
As Aero-News reported last
week, Northwest Airlines has also voiced its
opposition to the agreement, which would immediately allow
Southwest to begin through-ticketing on flights from Love, leading
to the complete repeal of the Wright Amendment in 2008. As a
tradeoff, the maximum number of gates allowed to operate at Love
would be capped at 20.
Three low-cost carriers -- AirTran, Frontier, and Spirit -- have
also objected to the plan, under the umbrella of the Air Carrier
Association of America (ACAA). Those carriers' plans, if any, for
Love Field weren't immediately known.
"You're destroying
gates and denying access to airlines that would like to serve
there," said Mr. Neeleman, whose discount carrier wants two gates
at Love, if the Wright restrictions are removed.
Meanwhile, the debate continues on Capitol Hill on passage of
the plan, which is null-and-void if not approved by the end of this
year.
Changes Proposed
As the deal has been vetted through the city councils of Dallas
and Fort Worth and lawmakers in Washington, the D/FW Airport Board
last week approved a final draft of the contract -- which contains
some changes from the original proposal
announced June 15:
- Airlines at Love Field would be allowed to write
one-stop tickets to international destinations under the
through-ticketing provision. Officials familiar with the
agreement said the provision was added at the request of
Continental, so it would be able to connect passengers flying from
Love through Houston Intercontinental to international
flights.
- American would be allowed to keep its three gates at
Love Field for four years, after which it would give up
one of those gates to Southwest.
- The cost of acquiring and demolishing the vacant Legend
Airlines terminal -- which Northwest Airlines regional
operator Pinnacle Airlines was said to be interested in -- would be
passed onto airport users, and not Dallas taxpayers.