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A Race to the Bottom for Airlines
Townhall.com ^ | December 28, 2010 | Armstrong Williams

Posted on 12/28/2010 8:36:08 AM PST by Kaslin

Considering how much I travel abroad and domestically constantly, I'm actually surprised how much I hate and resent the thought of flying. It’s not the fear of heights, or the turbulence, or even the perpetual fear of a terrorist attack. No, the blame lies squarely on the shoulders of airline carriers. Also, the utter agony and different standards for every airport of what can and can't pass through security screening is baffling.

Think about it. Every major industry today is progressing. Auto manufacturers are building cars with better fuel economies, more room, more horsepower and with fewer emissions. The same holds true for consumer electronics, power companies, phone carriers, freight rail, and trucking. Even the Postal Service seems to be trending in the right direction. Except the airlines.

If you don’t believe me, just ask yourself when was the last time you boarded a flight that wasn’t full to the gills? When did you actually have room in the overhead compartment to store your belongings? When do you last recall getting a meal or a cup of coffee without having to hand the flight attendant a major credit card? The seats are smaller, more uncomfortable, certainly more dirty than they have ever been. Smell that foul stench coming from the back of the plane? It’ll pass. Want a blanket? That’s $5 please. Want to watch TV? Another $5 please. What’s next, a coin-operated toilet??

For example, I honestly cannot name one colleague of mine who, when forced to travel to New York, doesn’t opt for the AMTRAK train over a flight into LaGuardia. In fact I've flown to NY only twice from DC since 9/11 and the Acela train is my only mode of transportation to and from the Big Apple. The Acela is truly a rare gift from Heaven and Earth when you think hard and along about future travel plans.

To add insult to injury, major air carriers either don’t seem to notice the plight of travelers or don’t seem to care. What they care most about is fleecing your wallet for the cost of your airline ticket.

There was a time when, if a plane were parked on the tarmac for hours at a time, the local news would show, interview passengers coming off complaining, and the airlines would be forced to run commercials pledging new commitments such as a passenger bill of rights. Today, they don’t even get so much as a meal voucher.

When oil spiked at over $155 per barrel years ago, airlines were first in line to complain they were going under if they couldn’t hike fares. They added surcharges for baggage to help defray the costs of the additional fuel. Today, oil is hovering around half the price of its all-time highs. Are the baggage fees gone? Heck no. In fact, they’re now charging more!

Recently AOL's travel section had this to say about the airlines and their hidden fees and charges. "If you have flown any time over the last few years, it should come as no shock that most airlines are now charging for checked baggage, extra legroom, early boarding, and even in-flight food. But what you may not know is airlines are now considering flying during the holidays a privilege, and have instituted a surcharge for traveling on peak days. This "premium" fee of $10-$30 is added to the cost of your ticket if you fly throughout much of December and the beginning of January. Be wary of deceptively cheap fares, as these tickets are often driven up by add-on fees for holiday air travel."

At a time when most sectors are offering consumers their own “stimulus” packages to incentivize sales, the airlines have gone the other way. They ground planes and take them out of commission, limiting seats, artificially decreasing supply and driving prices up. Flights are routinely (and intentionally) overbooked, with flyers now receiving empty apologies followed by emotionless comments of “There’s nothing I can really do.”

Signs now warn “Doors close promptly 10 minutes before take-off” so carriers can cancel seat assignments for confirmed passengers and offer to standby passengers. At the same time, flight delays are at near-record highs, with average lapses inching toward hours, not minutes.

I recently took a cross-country flight. I was tired, hungry and bored. When I tried to find some solace in even a movie (a staple of major carriers on flights longer than say, 2.5 hours), it was as if I’d asked the flight attendant to do a cartwheel down the middle of the aisle. Her reply was the same, “We stopped doing that.” No explanation. No apology. Just a “deal with it” look on her face that made me feel as if I had asked for a lap dance.

I won’t name the airline because it doesn’t matter. They all seem to be the same. Come to think of it, have you noticed that all the airlines seem to have adopted their own “race to the bottom”? When one executive was recently asked why they no longer serve creature comforts such as a cookie or a second pass of the beverage cart, his response was, “Because no one else is.” That, my friends, is the sign of collusion, pure and simple. How can an industry purport to serve its customers when it’s constantly looking for a way to stiff them? Are their margins so short they can’t offer more than one bag of pretzels? I don’t believe that, because if it were true, they wouldn’t be in the airline business. Those executives would be in the pretzel business where pennies on the dollar signal boon times.

Part of me can’t help but to blame regulators for this mess. There are so many obstacles to entry in the domestic carrier industry. And when one airline seems to get a foothold, they’re quickly squashed by the competition, either due to pre-determined hubs and flights or because the sector is both cash and capital intensive. What results is the opposite – major mergers of airlines that threaten to consolidate power (and oligopolistic behavior) even further. Or worse, bankruptcies that let carriers restructure and return, with even less incentive to cater to customers.

Maybe I’m just complaining. I haven’t really offered statistics or any economic models to support my claims. But do I really need to? I still take flights that make a refugee camp look like Club Med in terms of seating. I still have to pay resort-style prices for quickie-mart quality food. And I still feel like I’m taken to the cleaners every time I purchase a ticket to a destination that requires me to actually carry a change of clothes.


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1 posted on 12/28/2010 8:36:10 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Why would anyone pay extra to board a stinking airplane early?

As for flying, never again. There’s nobody who I care to see who’s more than a day’s drive away.


2 posted on 12/28/2010 8:48:58 AM PST by Terry Mross
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To: Kaslin

The author fails to mention labor costs (pilots, attendants, ground, mechanics). Another example of union power.

They are all depressing to fly. United, American, Delta. Southwest is the most honest about its bare-bones service. US Air is a nightmare.

I used to fly USAir quite a bit. I was stuck in coach against the window. Sold out flight. No entertainment (DCA-PHX). This was after several hours delay for mechanical reasons. They charged for coffee! FAs were rude (again, union members).

As all airlines are morphing into one big union workshop, they will all suffer from lousy food, rude workers, and the other downside to union shops.

I don’t object to unions per se. I would like a choice: unionized vs nonunionized. But that is not how unions and government want it.


3 posted on 12/28/2010 8:50:03 AM PST by Squidster
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To: Kaslin
I don't fly anymore. If I cannot drive there, I don't go. Simply, basically, there is no where that I want to visit that I will fly there. I have gone through their garbage enough in my life time. I refuse to pay the stupid fees, all over the airport, parking lot, baggage, stinking food service, dirty bathrooms, arrogant employees, stupid employees, and late airlines, long lines, sitting in a seat next to a person who smells like a septic tank or burned building with smoking. Sitting next to the fat guy who needs two seats, yet flows over into mine and causes me to suffocate. Nope. No more. I am done with flying. Ain't gonna go no mo.
4 posted on 12/28/2010 8:53:10 AM PST by RetiredArmy (Read, learn, know: 1 Cor 15: 1-4; THAT IS ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW!)
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To: Terry Mross

If it is at all possible, one should quit flying.


5 posted on 12/28/2010 8:54:05 AM PST by Banjoguy (Barack H. Obama, the Democrats and the MSM are at war with the American people.)
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To: Squidster

This guy needs to fly Southwest more. They don’t promise much service, but they do deliver what is promised quite effectively.


6 posted on 12/28/2010 8:54:14 AM PST by dirtboy
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To: Terry Mross

“As for flying, never again. There’s nobody who I care to see who’s more than a day’s drive away.”

My thoughts exactly.


7 posted on 12/28/2010 8:55:07 AM PST by ZirconEncrustedTweezers (Attn. GOP: Deliver the goods, or we'll do to you what we did to the Dems!)
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To: Squidster

Ever had a chance to fly Aeroflot? You might want to revise your standards for “bad”.


8 posted on 12/28/2010 8:56:19 AM PST by ASOC (What are you doing now that Mexico has become OUR Chechnya?)
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To: Kaslin

25 years ago I worked at O’hare ORD. It was $100.00 per 1000lbs to land each aircraft, 737-300’s & MD80’s. I can only guess what the rates are today with the bigger A/C.

The whole union thing is right on too, huge cost factor.

Flying isn’t really the crappiest part of the trip, getting through security is, in my opinion.


9 posted on 12/28/2010 8:57:05 AM PST by 23 Everest (A gun in hand is better than a cop on the phone.)
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To: Kaslin

Naked and in Suspended Animation.

It’s the only SAFE way to transport large numbers of people.


10 posted on 12/28/2010 8:57:10 AM PST by WayneS (Enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm. -- James Madison)
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To: Kaslin

Just look for the union label


11 posted on 12/28/2010 8:57:21 AM PST by bobjam
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To: Kaslin

Curious that there was no mention of the three security checkpoint choices now available:

1. Get lit up in the naked picture cancer machine.

2. Get sexually assaulted by a minimum wage worker.

3. Get arrested for refusing items 1. and 2. above.

This is the straw that finally broke the camel’s back for me. Add this to the rest, and I’ve decided flying is not something I want to do anymore. I wish everyone else would decide the same thing, because that’s the only way anything will change for the better.


12 posted on 12/28/2010 9:00:12 AM PST by catnipman (Cat Nipman: Made from the right stuff!)
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To: ASOC

Yes, I have.

And yes, they might.


13 posted on 12/28/2010 9:00:13 AM PST by WayneS (Enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm. -- James Madison)
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To: Kaslin
Signs now warn “Doors close promptly 10 minutes before take-off” so carriers can cancel seat assignments for confirmed passengers and offer to standby passengers.

Is one of the qualifications to be a 'standby passenger' an ability to pass through closed doors?

14 posted on 12/28/2010 9:03:35 AM PST by WayneS (Enlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm. -- James Madison)
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To: Squidster

Most Delta employees are non-union.


15 posted on 12/28/2010 9:04:29 AM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: Kaslin
"Maybe I’m just complaining."

Yep. Man up.

If you have plenty of time, fly. Bring your own live chicken to cook en route.

16 posted on 12/28/2010 9:08:19 AM PST by Paladin2
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To: Kaslin

I’ve been in the “Biz” since just after Deregulation took hold. I remember when airlines actually served warm meals in coach, even on some flights of LESS than an hour.

Then, PeopleExpress and Southwest came along, and showed the average traveler could care less about amenities, and just wanted the lowest possible ticket price.

Today’s environment means the lowest-cost provider wins. PERIOD. And though I loved the warm cookies on KIWI, and the meals on Midwest Express, they couldn’t find enough passengers willing to pay a premium to survive.

As long as you are willing to pay outrageous baggage fees, the airlines are going to charge you for them. Why shouldn’t they?

And don’t get me started on some airports, that are nothing but political corruption programs for the Dems in charge. They literally rape the airlines in some places!


17 posted on 12/28/2010 9:13:00 AM PST by tcrlaf (Obama White House=Tammany Hall on the National Mall)
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To: Kaslin
just ask yourself when was the last time you boarded a flight that wasn’t full to the gills?

November 13, 2010 from Reno to Chicago. There were 38 of us on a 737. 2nd best flight of my life. The first being a first class upgrade on Air Jamaica from Montego Bay to Chicago. Outstanding service.

18 posted on 12/28/2010 9:15:06 AM PST by Lurker (The avalanche has begun. The pebbles no longer have a vote.)
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To: Banjoguy

WE are not flying anymore until the TSA gets the boot. If we have to fly we will put out the money to fly Executive Jet.


19 posted on 12/28/2010 9:28:17 AM PST by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped.)
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To: Kaslin
The Acela is truly a rare gift from Heaven and Earth when you think hard and along about future travel plans.

More precisely, it is a part of the huge taxpayer Amtrack subsidy, extracted under threat of penalty of law from the vast bulk of American citizens who never use Acela nor have any particular desire to.

Enjoy your "gift from heaven" Armstrong.

20 posted on 12/28/2010 9:32:42 AM PST by Cincinatus (Omnia relinquit servare Rempublicam)
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