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DOT 72-08
Contact: Brian Turmail, Tel.: (202) 366-4570
Thursday, May 22, 2008
U.S. Transportation Secretary Peters Announces Opening of Military Airspace
for Memorial Day Weekend Flights, Other Measures to Reduce Flight Delays
Air travelers are getting some relief from the military this Memorial Day
Weekend thanks to a new agreement to make military airspace available for
commercial airline flights off the East Coast, U.S. Transportation Secretary
Mary E. Peters announced today.
“This airspace will give travelers yet another reason to thank the military this
Memorial Day weekend,” Secretary Peters said. “It gives airlines a fighting
chance to beat delays by allowing them to plan new routes in one of the most
congestion aviation corridors on the country.”
The Secretary said that the Department of Defense is making airspace available off the eastern seaboard for commercial airline flights starting at 6
p.m. EDT on Friday, May 23rd. The space will be available continuously until 7
a.m. EDT on Tuesday, May 27th. She noted that the arrangement follows similar
openings of military airspace for last year’s Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday
seasons.
Secretary Peters added that travelers also are likely to benefit from other
steps being taken by the Department of Transportation to reduce air travel
delays. She noted, for example, that the Department is pursuing a plan at all
three New York airports that combines caps and auctions to reduce congestion
while keeping fares low.
She added that the Department’s Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is
expanding a program to help airlines avoid delays by adjusting air traffic
routes to respond to weather developments. “Even though we can’t manage the
weather, this program allows us to work around weather conditions and keep
traffic moving,” said acting FAA Administrator Robert Sturgell.
Secretary Peters also noted that the agency was putting in place a new program
that cuts delays by using advance software to scan airports for unused take off
and landing “slots.” She added that the FAA was also continuing to make a number
of new airspace routes available in the New York region to help address chronic
aviation backups in the region.
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