United Chief Executive Scott Kirby wrote to Acting FAA
Administrator Billy Nolen last week to urge him to increase
capacity at JFK, according to an email Tuesday by the airline to
employees that was seen by Reuters.
United is flying just twice daily to San Francisco and Los
Angeles from JFK, the busiest New York-area airport, after
resuming service in 2021.
"If we are not able to get additional allocations for multiple
seasons, we will need to suspend service at JFK, effective at
the end of October," United's email said.
The FAA said in a statement Tuesday it "must consider airspace
capacity and runway capacity to assess how changes would affect
flights at nearby airports. Any additional slots at JFK would
follow the FAA's well-established process of awarding them
fairly and to increase competition."
United said it had been working to pursue additional slots -
which are takeoff and landing authorizations - through the FAA
and market at JFK "so that we can grow to be more competitive"
and said without permanent slots it cannot serve JFK
"effectively compared to the larger schedules and more
attractive flight times flown by our competitors" like JetBlue
Airways and American Airlines.
United in 2015 struck a long-term deal to lease 24 year-round
slots at JFK to Delta Air Lines as it ended JFK service to
concentrate at its nearby Newark hub in northern New Jersey.
United argues there is room to grow at JFK, the 13th-busiest
U.S. airport, because the FAA and the Port Authority since 2008
have made significant infrastructure investments including "the
widening of runways, construction of multi-entrance taxiways,
and the creation of aligned high-speed turnoffs."
In June, the FAA approved United's request to temporarily cut
about 50 daily summer departures from its Newark airport hub to
address congestion, representing 12% of United's 425 daily
flights at Newark. United is the dominant carrier at Newark,
operating 69% of flights.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman and Gerry Doyle)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|