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The privately held airline currently operates about 150 daily flights. Most carry leisure travelers from big airports in the U.S. through Fort Lauderdale and on to Latin America. Spirit had extra employees on hand Sunday at airports to assist passengers. The airline was expecting to handle 23,000 passengers on Sunday, including 5,800 in Fort Lauderdale. The Spirit terminal in Fort Lauderdale was mostly calm as passengers checked in. One couple could be seen going through two large suitcases, trying to make room for items they were taking out of a duffle bag. Another man, after being told he'd have to pay to carry his bag, rushed to the ticket counter to check the carry-on and make the flight. Angel Aviles, 35, was traveling back to Puerto Rico out of Fort Lauderdale with his wife, daughter and father. They had a towering pile of suitcases on a cart that he said he had prepaid for online. There were also two carry-ons, which he said he did not know carried a charge. "It's a surprise," he said as he waited in a line approaching the ticket counter. "It's too expensive. Compared to other airlines, they've raised it too much." Spirit will be collecting data over the next few weeks to see how the plan is working out. No hard numbers were yet available. Whether or not passengers eventually warm to Spirit's new fee, some other airlines have agreed that they won't take the same approach. New York Sen. Charles Schumer extracted a promise from five of the nation's biggest airlines, including AMR Corp.'s American Airlines and Delta Air Lines Inc., that they won't charge for carry-on bags.
[Associated
Press;
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