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DOT 130-07
Contact: Brian Turmail, Tel.: (202) 366-4570
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary Peters Announces New Proposals
to Reduce Air Travel Delays During Holidays & Summer of 08
HERNDON, VA -- U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary E. Peters today announced new
measures to reduce airline delays over the holiday season and new actions
designed to reduce congestion in the New York area starting next summer.
“These new measures will cut delays, protect consumer choice, support New York’s
economy, and allow for new flights as we bring new capacity online,” Secretary
Peters said.
She said the new measures developed at the direction of President Bush this fall
include an agreement to cap hourly operations at JFK International Airport,
plans for hourly limits at Newark and capacity improvements for the region, and
were based on input from a multi-month process that involved airlines, airports
and consumer advocates.
The agreement among the major airlines serving JFK caps the number of flights at
either 82 or 83 per hour, depending on the time of day, Secretary Peters said.
The hourly caps will take effect March 15, 2008 and will be in place for 2008
and 2009. Airlines will be able to shift their flights to times of the day when
the airport has unused capacity, allowing 50 more flights per day than were
offered last summer - just more reasonably spaced, she said.
The Secretary also directed the FAA to enter into negotiations to set hourly
caps at Newark International Airport, so that flights aren’t simply shifted
there, erasing gains made at JFK. Effective today, Secretary Peters also
announced new take-off patterns at Newark and Philadelphia International Airport
that will allow aircraft to fan out after take off and provide more options for
aircraft waiting to depart.
She said the FAA is working closely with airports and airlines to make similar
operational improvements next year, including new satellite-based navigation
procedures for the New York and Philadelphia airports that will allow improved
bad weather routing, and allowing shorter flights to operate at lower altitudes
to open more room for long-haul flights at higher altitudes.
The Secretary also authorized the appointment of an aviation “czar” to serve as
director of the newly-created New York Integration Office. The czar will
coordinate regional airspace issues and all projects and initiatives addressing
problems of congestion and delays in New York. And as operational improvements
increase capacity at area airports, new slots will be leased to airlines with
the revenue being used for airspace and airport improvements in the region.
Secretary Peters said the FAA and Defense Department will open military airspace
to commercial flights over the Atlantic seaboard from the evening of Dec. 21 to
the morning of the Dec.26, and from evening of Dec. 28 to the morning of Jan. 2.
In addition, western military airspace will be opened from Dec. 21 to the
morning of Jan. 2 to help accommodate flights in and out of southern California,
she said.
“These Holiday Express lanes in the sky will give airlines the wiggle room they
need to avoid backups, evade weather, and dodge delays,” Secretary Peters said.
In addition, the Secretary said she has formed a new federal advisory task force
that will help airlines and airports better coordinate when unexpected weather
strands passengers on tarmacs and in airports. She also authorized the FAA to
exercise liberal use of overtime to make sure facilities are staffed to handle
the surge in traffic, and placed a moratorium on non-essential maintenance
through the holidays so controllers can focus on traffic.
Secretary Peters said she will continue talks with airlines and airports to look
at ways to utilize broader market-based mechanisms to combat delays not only in
the New York region, but in clogged aviation centers elsewhere around the
country.
And she urged Congress to act on legislation, provided 10 months ago by the
Administration, that would enable FAA to move forward with a next generation air
traffic system. “By eliminating this single delay, Congress can help end
aviation gridlock, expand aviation capacity, and keep our skies safe,” Secretary
Peters said.
# # #
New Federal Advisory Task Force on Tarmac and Airport Delays affecting
passengers
JFK Delay and Constraint Analysis