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AIRLINE CRISIS: Feels like the sky is falling

Higher fares could force LV hotels to lower rates

Sky-high jet fuel costs and a recession won't necessarily make flying to Las Vegas a bigger pain.

It could be more like a dull ache that gets progressively worse.

Las Vegas passengers will still have relatively low fares, myriad flight times and airlines to choose from, and a better selection of direct flights than similar, or even larger, communities.

But the fiscal squeeze that's already grounded four carriers in recent weeks will likely force remaining airlines to wring low-performing flights and cheap fares from their offerings.


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  • That means seats will get a bit more expensive, flights will be a little more crowded and passengers and crew may be slightly crankier, unless the economics of the airline business somehow change for the better.

    "It is going to make people irritable," said Corene Nelson of Las Vegas as she waited for a Frontier Airlines flight to Denver on Thursday.

    The cost of jet fuel rose nearly 6 percent during the past month and nearly 62 percent in the past year.

    That, combined with an economic downturn that's making Americans feel poorer, is putting pressure on carriers stuck between a need to cover higher costs and a desire to encourage folks to keep flying.

    Last week the pressures were evident in the demise of Aloha and ATA airlines, two carriers that represented as much as 40 percent of the service between Las Vegas and Hawaii, Sin City's 10th largest source state for visitors. Discount airlines MAXjet and Skybus, and charter carrier Champion are also broke.

    In recent months US Airways, the second-largest carrier at McCarran, has posted revenue declines greater than 20 percent. The airline, which posted lower revenue in the fourth quarter of 2007, has cut back low-fare, late-night Las Vegas routes to shift aircraft to more profitable trips.

    "It is hard to find routes in the U.S. that are making money," said Darryl Jenkins, former director of the George Washington University Aviation Institute.

    There's been speculation that Frontier, a popular choice between Las Vegas and Colorado, could succumb to financial pressure. The airline gets high marks from customers and has been growing, but its competitors include much larger carriers Southwest and United Airlines.

    "It is between the Rockies and a hard place," said George Hamlin, managing director for the aviation consulting firm ACA Associates. "There clearly is not room for three full-scale competitive carriers in Denver."

    A Frontier spokesman did not return calls for comment.

    Southwest, the carrier with the biggest presence in Las Vegas, is holding steady despite the industry turmoil.

    Bill Owen, Southwest's senior schedule planner, said the airline had 245 daily departures from McCarran in March and April, up from 230 those months last year.

    "Our traffic to and from Vegas is incredibly strong," Owen said.

    The airline maintains low fares and profits in large part by hedging fuel, buying some of its fuel in bulk in advance to keep costs down when oil prices rise.

    But even with hedged fuel, Southwest on Thursday announced fare increases of $2 to $6 as a result of high oil prices.

    "Compared to what other carriers have done, it is negligible," Owen said.

    Overall, the number of flights daily from McCarran increased nearly 3 percent in January and 2 percent in February. But the number of passengers daily was down almost 3 percent in January and flat in February, suggesting planes left with more empty seats which would give airlines incentive to reduce service.

    In March, the number of flights leaving McCarran was down 1 percent compared with 2007. March passenger figures are not yet available.

    It's tough for routes to and from Las Vegas to make money because many passengers use frequent flier miles earned on expensive business flights to get cheap or free travel for a gambling vacation.

    "We always called Las Vegas 'Death Valley' ... because the fares suck," Jenkins said.

    Nelson, an operations manager for a health care company, travels two weeks every month and said she's seen airline service fray around the edges.

    She said she witnessed pressures on the industry in action a few weeks ago at the Southwest gates in Salt Lake City. At the time, Southwest was grounding jets the airline had neglected to properly inspect, an issue that's now grounding flights by American, Midwest and others.

    People from the grounded flights were crammed onto others or stuck milling about the crowded terminal.

    "It was packed, people were irritated, agitated," Nelson said.

    In Las Vegas, ramifications of economic turbulence for airlines could reverberate beyond the airport to the Strip if hotels lower rates to entice tourists and conventioneers to keep coming despite longer lines and thinner wallets.

    Senior investment analyst Joel Simkins, who specializes in casino and leisure company stocks for Macquarie Capital, wants to know how big resorts might react to the problems of the airline industry, which is responsible for delivering about half of the 39 million people who visit Las Vegas annually.

    Simkins said the fixed cost of maintaining a fancy hotel room on the Strip for a night can be as low as $20 to $25. If the room fetches $150, $250 or even $300 per night for the hotel, it adds up to a nifty profit, the kind of money that in recent years had Wall Street bidding some casino stocks beyond $100 per share.

    "That is a pretty good margin on a business," Simkins said. "Every incremental dollar is extremely profitable."

    Investors worry tough times for the airline industry will slow the flow of easy money from Las Vegas resorts from a gush to a trickle.

    In a note to investors Thursday, Simkins said long-haul fares from Boston, New York, Miami and Washington, D.C., to Las Vegas are up 15 percent to 30 percent in the last year.

    "Our concern is that it is going to cause (resorts) to discount room rates," Simkins said. "Driving higher room rates has been a very significant profit center for the Strip."

    Passengers Barbara and Charles Weatherholt and Judy Knowles of O'Fallon, Ill., provided a prime example of how bargain-hunting travelers gravitate to Las Vegas.

    They flew Frontier from St. Louis to Denver to Las Vegas on tickets they got for spending $150 on Dockers brand clothes. The group got a discount stay at the Rio and sought out half-price show tickets during a four-day stay that ended Thursday.

    Knowles says she trolls the Internet for travel bargains and alerts friends and family to the deals.

    "When I see a really great deal I call and say, 'See what I found,'" she said.

    Contact reporter Benjamin Spillman at bspillman@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3861.

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    YANKEE wrote on April 27, 2008 07:05 AM: My flight with Delta is $60.00 MORE than last year! I understand that fuel is part of it but I think their skymiles people should be able to obtain lower prices! I am loyal to Delta and feel people who are should receive a small discount for that.
    I have to fly out of Logan in Boston as opposed to the airport in RI where Southwest flys out of due to transportation isssues to an airport.
    As far as hotels go, I feel the same about the hotels as I do about the airlines, a discount for people loyal to their hotel.
    I save all year, which is not easy with todays heating prices, gas prices, food prices etc. I need ONE vacation and this is where I choose to take it, but I wonder if I will be able to do it after the prices of this year.


    Mike wrote on April 17, 2008 01:57 PM: Wow, I finally stopped laughing long enough to be able to write this - the two pilots who who want be treated like some type of professional individuals amaze me. Quit your whining. Its your airline owners and bosses who have created todays fuster cluck called air travel. You talk of once graceful and glamourour airtravel. I agree, yesterdays planes were outfitted more like limousines compared to todays poor excuse for buses with wings that have less leg room than a Yugo. And the crews actually used to treat its passengers with respect - not anymore. Besides, pilots use to actually fly planes. Today, the pilot punches in the the three letter airport code, and a couple of computers do the rest. All the pilot has to do is hit the gas and go, and then try and land the plane in three or fewer bounces. And every pilot, cabin attendant and ground crew staff I have seen uses just as many, if not more, phones, pdas and other electronic devices as anyone else. And why doesn't the airlines impose bag limitations on crews, especially given the cost of fuel? If you don't like the quality of the clientele, ask for another route or get another job. Otherwise, just shut up and drive!


    Dennis wrote on April 11, 2008 11:36 PM: Don: It seems that you are the one whining about all the problems with the airlines. If a ticket from Vegas to LA should cost $ 250.00 then why don't the airlines just charge that much? Or are they afraid that no-one would show-up for their flight? It is the airlines that have placed themselved in this mess - the general public will not bail them out!


    Whateverusaydear wrote on April 11, 2008 04:26 PM: While I would love to see a bullet train to cut congestion, that isn't going to happen in Vegas.

    Vegas can't even get a quality light rail system running in the city; people whine (like they did in other cities prior to light rail) "not in my backyard", and the monorail which takes you from nowhere to nowhere has priced itself out of the market.

    It's not like Vegas has demonstrated any leadership in showing the masses the positives of quality rail systems for Vegas.

    No one really expects the problems airlines are facing to get any better do they? Unlike some other companies we all know and love, airlines aren't exactly raking in billion dollar profits annually. How do people expect airlines to fly indefinitely with rising costs and revenue doesn't keep up? Airlines are for-profit businesses, not charities or money-losing government subsidized programs.


    Don wrote on April 11, 2008 02:28 PM: Being a pilot for a major airline, and living in Vegas but fortunately not based here, so I don't have to fly the cattle in and out of Vegas, it amazes me to no end how stupid this city is. It costs in todays times, about 550,000 dollars to fill up an A320 or 737, and you fools complain about ticket prices. Airliners do not float once we reach cruising altitude, nor do they take off straight up, so as not to interfere with Summerlins outdoor barbeques. Adjusted for inflation, and with todays prices, a ticket to Los Angeles should cost about $250.00 roundtrip. Funny, still only sells for about $125.00. So what is the problem?? Oh I know, no free champagne, no comps like in casinos, and no gourmet food bar when you board. You idiots should realize flight attendants are there for safety and not vallets or waiters, and food if you can't survive for 1.5 hours can be purchased. Here is a thought for you Vegas mooches as one writer calls you, try greyhound and leave the driving to them !!! And telling airline employees about your status at Harrahs or MGM is meaningless to us. Good only in Vegas, no where else in the world. Your frequent gambler status and card and $5.00 will get you a beer or wine next time on one of my flights !!!!!


    duh wrote on April 11, 2008 01:05 PM: mark$.what do you mean will become.america is already a third world country..where have you been??


    Advisor wrote on April 11, 2008 12:55 PM: The solution for the passenger and our long-term transportation needs is bullet trains.

    It is a viable alternative to air travel, esp. regionally (GAO-02-185). According to the USDOT, regional air travel only averages about 65MPH (door-to-door). Regular rail is even faster, downtown-to-downtown for.

    Bullet trains could reduce congestion by more than 50%!

    According to the state of California, it will cost about 1/3 that of airport expansions and create millions of new jobs!

    The problem: it doesn't put the money in the right people's pocket, if you know what I mean...

    Call your legislator and demand better transportation and competition to air travel.


    Chris wrote on April 11, 2008 11:36 AM: Couldn't agree with Chad more..I am a pilot for a major carrier and despise flying people in and out of Las Vegas. The tourists are mostly obnoxious and licqoured up before we hit the gate, and the local business people especially casino poeple whine like babies for freebies etc. and complain about anything and everything before we ever take off. Not to mention these fools always bring three cell phones, 4 pdas, and god knows hoe many computer gadgets. They must enjoy calling themselves pretending to close this imaginary BIG DEAL of some sort. Air travel was once graceful and glamorous, but those days are gone. Flip flops and t-shirts have long since replaced shirts and ties or dressing for first class. At a cost of near half a million to fill a 757 or a 737, where do you think the pricing will go ?? And you are not happy with free penuts or cookies on a 90 minute flight ?? What do you nuts get at your precious casinos for free while happily emptying your wallet at a slot machine ?? Nothing, unless you are too cheap to tip as well..This is one of the nations busiest and most overcrowded airports. Rather than whine about the cost of air travel, or not getting a gourmet meal on a 2 hour flight, petition your local politicians to do something about building another airport quickly, providing ample and affordable parking, and easy access in and out without mindless road construction near every aiport exit. You folks have had some street digging going on for almost 6 months near the airport that seems to have no end in sight. But fixing an inch a day, seems to be the Vegas style, except where your stupid casinos are concerned.......


    chad wrote on April 11, 2008 11:17 AM: Okay all you Vegas cheapskates, here is the deal...Working for one of the countries biggest carriers, I speak with some degree of authority..Air travel is not a God given right, and can't be paid for with a casino comp. You all are so spoi.ed with casino freebies, you think waving your Harrahs cars around at the ticket counter will entitle you to something. All the airlines have mad cuts to keep fares down as low as possible, but that is never enough for you mooches. You want cheap fares, gourmet dining while flying from here to L.A., and expect to pay under $25.00 for the whole experience. Reality check...It costs over half a million to fill up a 757, and with crude oil rising constantly, it has to be reflected in ticket prices. If the cost bothers you that much, fill up your gas guzzling SUV which Nevada is famous for and drive the 4 hours to L.A. and stop at a McDonalds along the way to fill your belly. And if that is to bothersome then call Greyhound, and leave the driving to them..........And have your wife or girlfriend comp you a snack for the ride........


    stew wrote on April 11, 2008 10:49 AM: I find it hilarious that travelers think they are entitled to low fares. Airline travel is a choice, not a right.
    Airlines are a business and have to make profits to succeed. Besides, in most cases it is still cheaper to fly than to drive.


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