Deal In Works Since 2002
The US
Department of Transportation today issued a final decision
approving a code-sharing arrangement between American Airlines,
recently threatened with bankruptcy and scandal in the front
office, and British Airways.
Under the arrangement, each carrier will sell tickets of the
other carrier for travel on its own flights (code sharing), thereby
expanding each carrier's service. The arrangement will cover
a broad range of operations throughout each carrier's route
system. However, it will not cover nonstop US-London
flights. Unlike applications they previously filed with the
department, the carriers did not request antitrust immunity for
this arrangement. The code-sharing rights are effective
immediately and will remain in effect for two years.
American Needed This
American Airlines earlier this month won $1.8 billion in
concessions from its three major unions, despite a last-minute
revelation that the company's top executives, including Chairman
and CEO Don Carty - were entitled to millions of dollars in a
secret, bankruptcy-proof pension fund. That revelation, just days
after the union concession votes, infuriated the unions. They
threatened to rescind their agreements. Carty went on national
television during a news conference to apologize for his mistake in
not revealing details of the pension fund and other executive perks
during the union negotiations. It wasn't good enough. The next day,
Carty was a goner, having resigned from American's parent
corporation, AMR.
In its final decision, the Department of Transportation
reaffirmed its tentative conclusion that the proposed code-share
services are provided for under the US-UK bilateral aviation
agreement, that they would offer enhanced service to the public,
and that they would not impair competition.
In a modification of the tentative decision to which the
applicants agreed, DOT said that the carriers initially may offer
code-share services between the United Kingdom and specific
third-country markets where there are no restrictions that would
require a US-carrier selection proceeding. The final order
also requires the carriers to notify the department for its review
30 days in advance if they plan to begin code-share service on any
additional routes.
American and British Airways applied for code-sharing rights on
Nov. 18, 2002. The code sharing approved today would not permit the
carriers to plan and coordinate services as antitrust immunity
would allow. The department has said that an Open Skies
agreement, which eliminates restrictions on air services between
and beyond the participating countries, is a prerequisite to
granting antitrust immunity. The goal of the United States
remains replacing the current restrictive agreement with Open
Skies.