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Travel News
Airlines Details Flight Cuts
The nation's major airlines will stop flying more than 350 planes by the end of 2009, reducing service to travelers around the United States this year and next, according to carriers' reports.
American Airlines announced last month that it plans to retire 40 to 45 mainline aircraft and 35 to 40 regional jets, reducing capacity by 11 percent to 12 percent. Starting in September, American is discontinuing its Chicago to Buenos Aires, Argentina, service, eliminating its Boston to San Diego service. September, the carrier is also restructuring American and American Eagle flights out of San Juan, Puerto Rico, to the United States and various Caribbean destinations.
New York's LaGuardia: Starting in November, the airport will have five fewer American Airline flights and 37 fewer American Eagle departures.
Chicago: 28 fewer American flights and 34 fewer American Eagle departures will service the Windy City.
About 80 of United's planes will be out of service by the end of the year and the other 20 will be retired in 2009. Removing those planes from service means United will slash domestic capacity over this year and next by 17 percent.
Delta is removing 15 to 20 mainline planes and 60 to 70 regional jets from service by the end of the year. Delta expects domestic capacity to be down 9 percent to 11 percent for the second half of 2008 compared with 2007.
Continental Airlines became the latest carrier to announce cutbacks, saying it would retire 67 planes More than half of those planes will stop flying by the end of 2008 and the rest of the aircraft will be retired in 2009.
All major U.S. air carriers are trimming their operations in hopes of finding ways to afford doing business as fuel prices rise, and cities of all sizes are feeling the airline crisis hit home.
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