Showing posts with label Frontier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frontier. Show all posts

Friday, September 9, 2016

Frontier flights from Miami to Havana starts on 01DEC16

Αποτέλεσμα εικόνας για frontier a320

Frontier Airlines yesterday (07SEP16) opened reservation for service to Cuba, initially with Miami – Havana route. Subject to Government Approval, this route will be operating on daily basis with Airbus A320 aircraft, effective 01DEC16.

F9014 MIA0845 – 0953HAV 320 D
F9015 HAV1055 – 1203MIA 320 D

Routesonline

Saturday, September 3, 2016

The US DOT finalizes Havana route allocations

Αποτέλεσμα εικόνας για havana airport

The US Department of Transportation (DOT) says it has now finalized its allocation of Havana Int'l, Cuba traffic rights to local US carriers. The announcement came shortly after jetBlue Airways on Wednesday, August 31, became the first US commercial carrier to operate a scheduled service to Cuba in over fifty years.

As per a July 7 tentative decision, the following airlines have been awarded the following Havana routes and frequencies by the DOT:

- Alaska Airlines: a 1x daily Los Angeles Int'l-Havana service using B737-900(ER) equipment;

- American Airlines: a 4x daily Miami Int'l-Havana service using B737-800 equipment and a 1x daily Charlotte-Havana service using A319-100 equipment;

- Delta Air Lines: a 1x daily New York JFK-Havana service using B757-200 equipment, a 1x daily Atlanta Hartsfield Jackson-Havana service using B757-200 equipment, and a 1x daily Miami Int'l-Havana service using B737-800 equipment;

- Frontier Airlines: a 1x daily Miami Int'l-Havana service using A320ceo and A320neo equipment;

- jetBlue Airways: a 2x daily Fort Lauderdale Int'l-Havana service (except Saturdays) using A320/321 equipment, a 1x daily New York JFK-Havana service using A320/321 equipment, and a 1x daily Orlando Int'l-Havana service using A320/321 equipment;

- Southwest Airlines: a 2x daily Fort Lauderdale Int'l-Havana service using B737-800 equipment and a 1x daily Tampa Int'l-Havana service using B737-800 equipment;

- Spirit Airlines: a 2x daily Fort Lauderdale Int'l-Havana service using A319 equipment; 

- United Airlines: a 1x daily Newark-Havana service using B737-800 equipment (with one additional Saturday-only flight) and a 1x weekly Houston Intc'l-Havana service (Saturdays only) using B737-800 equipment.

Under the terms of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) signed between the US and Cuba in February this year, each country may operate up to twenty daily return flights between the US and Havana and up to ten daily return flights between the US and each of Cuba’s nine international airports - Camagüey, Cayo Coco, Cayo Largo del Sur, Cienfuegos, Holguin, Manzanillo Sierra Maestra, Santa Clara de Cuba, Santiago de Cuba, and Varadero - for a total of ninety daily return flights.

ch-aviation.com

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Frontier Adds New Las Vegas Domestic Routes from Sep 2016 :: Routesonline



Frontier Airlines from 06SEP16 is launching a new pair of routes from Las Vegas, where it plans to serve Nashville and Tampa. Both will be served on daily basis, with Airbus A320 Series aircraft. Planned schedule as follow.

Las Vegas – Nashville 
F91574 LAS0955 – 1533BNA 320 247
F91574 LAS1000 – 1538BNA 320 x247

F91577 BNA1625 – 1832LAS 320 247
F91579 BNA1805 – 2012LAS 320 x247

Las Vegas – Tampa
F91586 LAS2150 – 0515+1TPA 320 D
F91581 TPA0650 – 0850LAS 320 D

Frontier Adds New Las Vegas Domestic Routes from Sep 2016 :: Routesonline

Monday, June 13, 2016

U.S. to Cuba Commercial Flights Given Green Light by Obama Administration – Skift

calflier001  / Flickr

Six airlines won permission Friday to resume scheduled commercial air service from the U.S. to Cuba for the first time in more than five decades, another milestone in President Barack Obama’s campaign to normalize relations between the two countries.

The airlines — American, Frontier, JetBlue, Silver Airways, Southwest and Sun Country — were approved by the Department of Transportation for a total of 155 roundtrip flights per week. They’ll fly from five U.S. cities to nine cities in Cuba other than Havana.
The airlines must begin service within 90 days, although they can request an extension if they need more time. Some of the airlines have been working for months on logistics and have told the department they could start flying in as few as 60 days. Other airlines have indicated they may need as much as four months to get ready.
Approval is still required by the Cuban government, but the carriers say they plan to start selling tickets in the next few weeks while they wait for signoffs from Cuba.
More than a year ago, Obama announced it was time to “begin a new journey” with Cuba. “Today we are delivering on his promise,” said Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx.
As it considers opening routes to Havana, the department’s selection process has been complicated because airlines have requested far more routes than are available under the U.S. agreement with Cuba. A decision on Havana routes is expected later this summer.
The routes approved Friday were not contested because there was less interest among U.S. airlines in flying to Cuban locations other than Havana.
All flights currently operating between the two countries are charters, but the agreement the administration signed with Cuba in February allows for up to 110 additional flights — more than five times the current charter operations.
American Airlines has been the most aggressive in its approach, requesting more than half the possible slots to Havana plus service to five other, smaller Cuban cities. The airline has a large hub in Miami, home to the largest Cuban-American population. The Fort Worth, Texas-based airline has also been flying aircraft on behalf of charter companies for the longest time, since 1991.
U.S. airlines have been feverishly working to establish relationships with Cuban authorities. For instance, American had a number of meetings this week in Havana with Cuban aviation and banking officials.

“We have been working for months on this plan,” Galo Beltran, Cuba country manager for American Airlines told The Associated Press this week during the trip to Havana. “For us, it is going to be fairly easy because of the experience we have.”
Cuba already has seen startling growth in aviation. Last year, it saw 18 percent more passengers than in 2014, according to government aviation officials.
Currently, 46 airlines fly to Cuba, including Air France, Aeromexico, KLM, Air Canada, Areoflot and Iberia.
Cuban aviation officials say they are ready for the extra flights but that questions remain, especially at Havana’s airport, about where the additional planes will park.
There has been plenty of interest by Americans in visiting Cuba since relations between the two nations started to thaw in December 2014. Nearly 160,000 U.S. leisure travelers flew to Cuba last year, along with hundreds of thousands of Cuban-Americans visiting family.
Most Americans still cannot legally visit Cuba; however, the Obama administration has eased rules to the point where travelers are now free to design their own “people-to-people” cultural exchange tours with very little oversight.
Prices for an hourlong charter flight are about $500, while commercial airlines will probably offer flights for significantly less than that amount, although none have publicly discussed pricing. The check-in process for charters is also a cumbersome one, and the companies lack the traditional supports of commercial aviation such as online booking and 24-hour customer service.

U.S. to Cuba Commercial Flights Given Green Light by Obama Administration – Skift