Interesting People mailing list archives

Re: OR UNITED?? Soon, no free drinks if you fly US Airways


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Sat, 21 Jun 2008 04:46:45 -0700


________________________________________
From: Richard Forno [rforno () infowarrior org]
Sent: Saturday, June 21, 2008 7:43 AM
To: David Farber
Cc: ip
Subject: Re: [IP] Re:  OR UNITED??  Soon, no free drinks if you fly US Airways

Speaking of the airlines, now this:

United Airlines to require minimum stays from Oct.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap_travel/20080620/ap_tr_ge/travel_brief_airlines_fares

Stupid TSA security requirements, horrible airport experiences, aging
fleets, rising fuel prices, airlines on the verge of bankrupcy, nickle-
and-dime fees for everything, more onerous travel schedule
requirements, and now even WORSE customer service (is that possible?)
all converging together is creating the Perfect Storm that likely will
lead to the demise and/or serious consolidation of the US passenger
aviation system.

I wonder what these new airline changes at airlines, airplanes, and
airports has meant for videoconferencing companies and other remote
colalboration ventures -- have they seen increased business as a
result of folks not willing to pay for higher fuel costs or the
privilege of being treated as cattle, sheep, suspected terrorists, or
nothing more than sources of endless revenue for a rapidly-
deteriorating mode of transportation?

-rick

On Jun 16, 2008, at 11:48 , David Farber wrote:


________________________________________
From: Matthew Tarpy [tarpy () tarpify com]
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2008 10:53 AM
To: David Farber; ip
Subject: RE: [IP] OR UNITED??  Soon, no free drinks if you fly US
Airways

Hi Dave (and IP)--

I think we need to come to terms with the fact that flying within
the US
(on the mainline carriers) has fundamentally started to change. These
dinosaurs are trying anything and everything to get just a little more
revenue in to stave off the eventual collapse of their business model.
What's the airline to consistently post profits? Southwest, and
eventually we're all going to move to that model.

I am on an assignment right now that has me flying weekly from
O'Hare to
Cincinnati...I'm on a small RJ, that seats around 40 people. It
kills me
that during the approximately 40 minutes we're airborne American Eagle
has the flight attendant hustle through a drinks service. If that were
to magically go away one day, not only wouldn't I miss it, I'd frankly
be surprised that it took so long. The cost to cater the plane and
serve
you 1/3 of a can of soda probably runs them $100 for the flight (ice,
soda, service charge from Skychefs/Swissport/whoever). Multiply that
by
the 14 ORD/CVG/ORD flights a day, you're saving $1400, multiply that
out
by 365 days, and you've just cut out $511K on just one regional jet
route. It's not hard to see the appeal of that type of cost savings
being bubbled out throughout a mainline's network, especially with oil
prices giving airline executives a major case of the "holy craps."

I say this not as one who hates the mainlines; far from it, I've had
AAdvantage Platinum status for almost a decade, and am already well
into
getting my 2nd million miles on AA, but I think that the current
marketplace is neither rational nor long tenable. I think within the
next 5 years we'll be down to three mainline carriers
(American/Continental and United/UsAir, and if they survive Delta/
NWA),
and a bunch of hungry cut-rate carriers (Southwest, JetBlue, and
Virgin
America). God help the mainlines if Michael O'Leary gets puckish, and
decides to open up Ryanair America...he'll clean their clocks.

--Matthew

-----Original Message-----
From: David Farber [mailto:dave () farber net]
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2008 4:34 AM
To: ip
Subject: [IP] OR UNITED?? Soon, no free drinks if you fly US Airways


________________________________________
From: redblk () dslextreme com [redblk () dslextreme com]
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2008 2:15 AM
To: frisbee2 () yahoogroups com
Cc: David Farber
Subject: Re: [frisbee2] Soon, no free drinks if you fly US Airways

I was on an "experimental" flight today where United flight attendants
were selling food and drinks and taking credit cards.  Not a bad idea
considering nobody carries cash anymore.

Calvin


Eric Glover

http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bal-bz.drinks13jun13,0,2294921.stor
y
------------------------
Water, coffee, juice, sodas due on pay list

By Laura McCandlish | Sun reporter
    June 13, 2008

Talk about taking the fizz out of air travel.

US Airways will become the first major U.S. airline in August to
charge
domestic coach passengers for soft drinks, juices, coffee and bottled
water as part of a shift to what it calls a "pay-for-what-you-use"
business model.

The $2-a-pop beverage charge is the latest in a raft of new charges
airlines have been imposing to help pay for record fuel costs.

Free nonalcoholic beverages have been one of the last freebies handed
out by domestic airlines, which already charge for alcoholic
beverages
and - except for Continental - for meals and even snacks on domestic
flights.

...
------------------------





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