Chicago O'Hare $8.5 billion expansion
plan approved by city council
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[March 29, 2018]
By Alana Wise
(Reuters) - Chicago's City Council on
Wednesday approved a multibillion-dollar expansion plan for O'Hare
International Airport, after an earlier dispute between the airport's
two largest carriers had previously threatened to snarl the project.
"We are investing in capacity, technology and modern facilities that
will elevate the customer experience and significantly improve
operational efficiencies with our historic $8.5 billion expansion plan,"
Ginger Evans, commissioner of the Chicago Department of Aviation, said
in a statement.
The city of Chicago entered into an agreement with carriers United
Airlines <UAL.N>, American Airlines <AAL.O>, Delta Air Lines <DAL.N> and
Spirit Airlines <SAVE.N> for airport renovations that include expanding
the airport's existing terminals and increasing the number and
availability of some gates.
United and American - the airport's two largest airlines - had
previously disagreed over the number of gates that would be allocated to
each carrier, with American in February accusing United of having
engaged in a "last-minute secret deal with the city" to snare additional
gates.
Earlier this month, the two resolved the dispute, with Chicago agreeing
to speed up construction of three common-use gates that will come into
use at roughly the same time United gets five additional gates.
American Airlines and its affiliated carriers accounted for 35.5 percent
of passengers at O'Hare in 2016, compared with 44.5 percent for United
carriers, according to city data.
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A United Airline Boeing 737-800 aircraft lands at O'Hare
International Airport in Chicago, Illinois,
U.S., April 11, 2017. REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski
"We commend the mayor and his team for reaching an agreement that
ensures O'Hare gives Chicago a competitive edge long into the future
and provides our great city the world-class airport it deserves,"
United Chief Executive Oscar Munoz said in a statement.
American also hailed the deal, saying its approval is "what is best
for the city of Chicago."
The city on Wednesday also approved an initial $4 billion of airport
revenue bonds to help finance the overall project. The bonds are
intended to fund portions of the new O'Hare Terminal Area Plan and
the Capital Improvement Plan.
The cash will also help refund outstanding bonds in an effort to
save money on prior finance deals. JPMorgan, Citibank and Loop
Capital Markets are the lead underwriters for selling the debt.
O'Hare is the world's second-busiest airport in terms of take-offs
and landings after Atlanta's Hartsfield–Jackson International
Airport, according to an Airports Council International 2016
ranking.
(Additional reporting by Daniel Bases, editing by G Crosse)
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