All Safety News – Page 1372

  • News

    US Airways makes new offer to pilots

    1997-08-06T00:00:00Z

    US AIRWAYS has made a new contract offer to pilots who are suing the US carrier over tactics used during fruitless bargaining over cost-cutting measures. The airline claims that the proposal would provide pilots with job security while enhancing growth in operations which keep pace with rival airlines. ...

  • News

    US starts up merge mania

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Low-fare, low-cost startups on both the east and west coasts of the US are seeking critical mass through mergers in their struggle for survival. On the east coast, ValuJet's mid-July merger with Airways Corporation allows the Atlanta-based airline to obtain critical mass without technically infringing the growth restrictions ...

  • News

    French kiss of life?

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Air France is getting into shape with a healthier balance sheet and budding alliance strategy. But its privatisation plans could be scuppered by the new French government and union problems remain. Lois Jones reports from Paris. Inhale, exhale. Inhale, exhale. Anybody got a spare inhaler handy? Air France needs more ...

  • News

    Business revolution

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    While Ansett Australia is certain to benefit from its relationships with Air New Zealand, United and Singapore Airlines, the carrier knows that internal change is required to ensure a more profitable future. By Tom Ballantyne. When former Cathay Pacific managing director Rod Eddington took control of financially struggling Ansett ...

  • News

    Shifting sands

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    European carriers have taken the lead across the North Atlantic, and major airports like Detroit, Heathrow and Amsterdam have emerged as the clear winners. April Pearson examines the latest data on the US-Europe market. Newly released International Onboard traffic data demonstrates how much the most competitive airline market in the ...

  • News

    Unity comes to Caribbean

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    The Caribbean islands, jolted by the damaging implications the threatened pilot strike at American Airlines could have had on tourism to the region, have put aside internal differences to pursue a unified commercial aviation policy. Air Jamaica and Montego Bay Airport, now designated the carrier's hub for the ...

  • News

    Everyone hit as strikes get a grip

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Employee morale slumps; airlines lose hard cash and goodwill; customers suffer. Short of a fatal accident, it's an airline chief executive's worst nightmare. Billions of dollars worth of shiny aircraft sit idly on the ground. Terminal buildings are thronged with displaced customers desperate to find a way to get to ...

  • News

    KLM ponders US disposal

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    As KLM increased its holding in Air UK to 100 per cent, speculation was mounting that the Dutch major was close to selling its 19 per cent stake in partner Northwest Airlines. The move by KLM to sell its stake in Northwest is seen by analysts as the ...

  • News

    Aer Lingus is left in a stew

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Aer Lingus may need its share of the luck of the Irish to pull it back from the brink of pending financial disaster. The airline requires equity investment via a public flotation or a strategic alliance, combined with a severe cost cutting programme, to pre-empt repetition of its ...

  • News

    Boeing clear?

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    The Boeing-McDonnell Douglas merger was awaiting European Commission approval at presstime after Washington had cleared the deal in early July. Early indications were that Brussels would approve the deal to avert a trade war. Boeing is expected to make concessions on its exclusive deals with three US airlines and the ...

  • News

    Agents of change

    1997-08-01T00:00:00Z

    The combination of commission capping by airlines and the advent of new technology was expected to spell doom for many in the travel agency business. But cushioned by the economic upturn, the sector is starting to adapt to the changing environment in a bid to survive. By Jane Levere. Commission ...

  • News

    TWA fleet costs jobs as other US majors report rise in profits

    1997-07-30T14:21:00Z

    Trans World Airlines (TWA) is to reduce its work force by some 1,000 people, with half the cuts being made in maintenance operations. The announcement comes as TWA reported a small loss in what was otherwise another quarter of healthy profits from major US carriers. TWA says that the ...

  • News

    Crash wreck found

    1997-07-30T14:19:00Z

    Thai search aircraft have found the wreckage of a Singapore Airlines (SIA) Learjet 31A which disappeared on 21 July during a routine training flight from Phuket to Ronong in southern Thailand. The aircraft, piloted by a crew of two, was last reported descending at 4,900ft (1,500m) when it disappeared from ...

  • News

    Quincy collision: never assume

    1997-07-30T13:48:00Z

    Sir - From the little I know about the Beech King Air/ United Express Beech 1900 accident [at Quincy Municipal Airport, Illinois, in November 1996], it seems clear that the King Air pilots were lax and deserved criticism, but to this timid pilot it is inexcusable if the 1900 pilots ...

  • News

    Crash report

    1997-07-30T10:41:00Z

    A UK Department of Transport and Environment air-accident report into the Learjet 25B business-jet crash at RAF Northolt has blamed the lack of crew-resource management (CRM) as one of the major causes. The incident occurred on 13 August, 1996, when the Spanish-owned aircraft overran the runway and collided with a ...

  • News

    Progress or plateau

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON Two years ago, the world airline industry swung out of recession in style, producing its best-ever set of profit figures. The question for 1996 was whether the recovery would continue to gain pace or whether this now represented the peak for this latest business cycle. In ...

  • News

    Emergency landing brings new 747-300 warning

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The emergency landing on 2 May at Sydney, Australia, of an Ansett Boeing 747-300 is likely to cause Boeing to upgrade to service-bulletin status a 1993 service letter recommending that aileron cable guards and pulley covers be replaced with new material. The aircraft, leased from Singapore Airlines (SIA), ...

  • News

    CityBird expands with two 767s and a pair of MD-11 freighters

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Herman de Wulf/BRUSSELS CityBird is to expand its fleet next year with the acquisition of Boeing 767s and McDonnell Douglas (MDC) MD-11 freighters. The Belgian low-fare scheduled airline, which began operations earlier this year with two MD-11s on transatlantic routes, will take delivery of two 268-seat ...

  • News

    China Southern kicks off 777 transpacific ETOPS with US flight

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Transpacific operations with the Boeing 777 were inaugurated on 21 July when one of China Southern Airlines' two General Electric-powered 777-200IGWs (increased gross weight) landed at Los Angeles after a 12h 37min flight from Guangzhou. The service began following 180min extended-range twin-engine operations (ETOPS) approval for the 777 ...

  • News

    Indonesian air safety goes into decline

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE A Garuda Indonesia McDonnell Douglas (MDC) MD-11 is undergoing structural repairs for damage caused by a tail strike, in the latest runway incident to hit the national airline. The mishap occurred in Hawaii on 21 June and is the third time in the past ...