Final Approval From DOT Friday Gives Green Light To Startup
Airline
Move over JetBlue and Southwest -- there's a new player
in the City by the Bay, with goals of expansion from
its San Francisco base of operations.

After three years of sometimes contemptuous debate, low-fare
Virgin America is set to take off front its San Francisco
International Airport base this summer and expects to begin selling
tickets within weeks, reports the San Francisco Chronicle.
Inaugural service will be to JFK.
The final hurdle is to obtain safety permits from the FAA, which
is expected soon.
The lengthy debate has centered over ownership and interest in
what is to be an American-controlled airline. As ANN reported in March, Virgin
significantly reconfigured its ownership and management structure
to meet strict US citizenship tests under federal law.
"We worked very hard to address the Department's initial
concerns, and are pleased that they have recognized our extensive
work and good faith commitment to meet and exceed those
requirements," said Virgin America CEO Fred Reid. "We plan to meet
with our shareholders immediately to address the Department's
proposed conditions."
As Aero-News reported, those
conditions include the removal of Reid as CEO, due to what the DOT
considered to be his overly-close relationships with foreign
investors, including Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson.
As a foreign entity, Virgin Group can control no more than 25
percent of Virgin America's voting shares. The new airline must
also report loans from Virgin Group to federal regulators.
Getting approval "has been a very tough ride," said Reid. "One
of the indicators is that my bald spot has grown faster than the
hole in the ozone."
Reid himself must step down
within six months as a condition of approval. Although the former
Delta CEO is an American citizen, because he was hired by British
entrepreneur Richard Branson, concerns about Virgin America's
autonomy were an issue.
Regulators said Reid's "longstanding association with foreign
investors" raised concerns about possible overseas influence.
"I don't see any point in dwelling on that," Reid said. "I'll
work day and night for a considerable period of time and will be
there to see the baby leave the nest."
He declined to say whether the airline has identified a
successor.
"We are jumping for joy that we can put our tracksuits on and
get out in the stadium and compete in the grand meet of the airline
business," Reid said.
Virgin has a staff of just over 200 and plans to hire 1,000
people a year for the next few years, according to spokesman Gareth
Edmondson-Jones.
"Virgin America is the first airline to be based in San
Francisco and in California," said Michael McCarron, SFO
spokesman.
"To have a national airline based in San Francisco will mean
several thousand jobs both directly and indirectly. There are all
the administrative jobs that go with an airline, plus all the
support jobs -- caterers, office suppliers, taxi drivers."
California job-training funds of $10 million helped attract the
carrier to San Francisco in 2004.
Reid declined to give specifics on where the airline will fly,
but said it will publish about six months of schedules, accounting
for 1 million seats, once it receives the go-ahead to start selling
tickets, which it expects to happen "within weeks."
Virgin, which reportedly has $177 million in financing, will fly
Airbus A319s and A320s out of SFO's International Terminal.