Kate Hanni’s FlyersRights.org issued their 2009 Real Air Travel consumer Report Card yesterday at the Press Club in Washington DC. If I came home with a report card like this when I was a kid, I’d get a spanking.
The 2009 report card for tarmac delays of more than three hours gave all of the major airlines a “F” for their performance. The major legacy airlines themselves — American, Continental, Delta, United and US Airways — were graded as failing; their grades were lower when they were combined with their codeshare regional airline partners. Read the rest of the story »
PBS’ Frontline unit has done a fascinating and disturbing bit of documentary journalism that tells the story of Colgan Air and the circumstances surrounding the crash of Continental flight 3407 in Buffalo, New York in February, 2009.
Colgan provides feeder services for United Airlines (as United Express), Continental (as Continental Connection), and US Airways (as US Airways Express), serving approximately 50 cities in the northeastern United States and Texas.
Click here to view the program in its entirety on the PBS site:
(You may also want to read the alarming comments of a United Airlines mechanic on the same page, who asserts several instances of serious, questionable maintenance practices at United’s mainline fleet.)
A total of 50 people (45 passengers; 2 crew members; 1 on the ground) lost their lives in the Colgan/ Continental incident, which was investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board. NTSB concluded that the crash, first believed to have been caused by icing during bad weather, was avoidable; the root cause of the crash was determined to be operational errors by both pilots, almost certainly exacerbated by both inexperience and fatigue.
With this post, I begin a two-part mashup in order to make some points about leadership, employee relations, and service culture within the airline industry. I’ve touched upon this before, but my take on it this time introduces some new material; i.e., the observations of customers of two airlines (Southwest and United) in a recent Newsweek blog piece. This is part 1; let’s get started:
Last week, Newsweek’s Budget Travel blog invited its readers to weigh in with their perceptions of who the best and and worst airlines in the industry are. Have a look; there’s nothing scientific about the responses of course, but I thought it might be fun to quantify and summarize the results a bit, in a little “back-of-the-envelope” analysis that turned out to be pretty interesting. Read more
The earthquake in Haiti that decimated the island nation’s largest city and much of the surrounding area, continues to be an extremely challenging set of disaster relief problems and human needs, rivaled only by the 2004 tsunami in lower Asia in which more than 500,000 people perished.
The official death toll as of January 28 is 170,000+ dead. Estimates for the total number of dead, which includes those not yet accounted for, exceed 250,000. Over half of Port-au-Prince’s population of 2 million people is in need of emergency shelter; almost all are currently dependent on outside aid groups and transport providers for food, water, medical care, and basic subsistence. Read more
mikerass: British Airways cabin crew union announces strike action for three days from Mar 20 and for four days from Mar 27 http://bit.ly/bnGvrb 1 minute ago from bit.ly