Congressmen back nonstop Aloha flights to D.C.
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Alicia Robinson
Two local congressmen are pushing the Department of Transportation to
approve a request from Aloha Airlines to add direct flights from
Washington, D.C. to John Wayne Airport.
Rep. Chris Cox, who has to change planes when he flies between the
capital and his district three times a month, is backing the
airline’s request for four of 12 available slots at Washington Reagan
National Airport. He was joined in his support by the entire Orange
County congressional delegation, including Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, who
said he got up at 5 a.m. Tuesday to catch an 8 a.m. flight out of Los
Angeles.
“It will be a big convenience for anyone from Orange County who
needs to go to the East Coast,” Cox said. “It will also be a positive
addition to travel options to have a new nonstop from Orange County
to Honolulu.”
Rohrabacher agreed that the flights would benefit travelers like
himself going from D.C. to Orange County.
“I would consider this to be a gift from God for which I would be
very grateful,” Rohrabacher said.
U.S Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta could decide as soon as
Friday whether to give Aloha Airlines the coveted slots at Washington
Reagan National, which would allow direct flights from the D.C. area
to Orange County and would add a second daily flight from JWA to
Honolulu.
“Being the second-largest county in the state and the
fifth-largest county in the country, it’s an important market to
serve,” JWA Director Alan Murphy said.
Cox said he offered his support because the airline is one of many
pursuing the slots at Washington Reagan National, and it’s up against
other carriers that are larger and do significant lobbying in
Washington, D.C. He and other local representatives sent Mineta a
letter urging him to approve the request.
When Washington Dulles International Airport was built in 1958,
Congress limited direct cross-country flights out of National to
encourage travelers to use Dulles, Cox said. The 12 new slots were
included in a Federal Aviation Administration bill passed last year.
“Right now, Orange Countians have to go to [Los Angeles
International Airport] or Long Beach to have nonstop flights to the
East Coast with only a few exceptions,” Cox said.
Rohrabacher said he has lobbied to get direct flights into
Washington Reagan National Airport before, but he has supported other
flight permission requests, including flights out of the former El
Toro Marine Air Base and United Parcel Service’s request for flights
to China.
“I would think that a flight from Orange County to Reagan would be
serving all of Orange County in a very positive way, and it would
certainly help me out, but I’m not the only one doing business in the
capital,” he said. “If the congressmen are the only ones who benefit
from this, they’ll cancel it pretty quick.”
Aloha Airlines specializes in niche markets, flying into smaller
airports such as Burbank and Oakland, airline spokesman Stu
Glauberman said.
“There’s a huge potential for both business, government and
leisure travel between [Washington, D.C.] and [Honolulu],” he said.
“We think it’s a fabulous market with great potential.”
JWA is Southern California’s third-largest airport. It served more
than 8.5 million passengers last year, airport spokesman Justin
McCusker said.
If Aloha gets the slots, it would offer two flights a day out of
JWA. A joint agreement between Newport Beach, Orange County, the
Airport Working Group and Stop Polluting Our Newport caps how many
passengers and flights the airport can have, so Aloha would have to
bump two existing flights to add the flight from Washington to
Honolulu via Orange County, McCusker said.
Glauberman said Aloha now offers five flights a day from JWA,
which are round trip flights to Phoenix, Reno, Honolulu, Maui and
Kona. He declined to comment on which flights might be scratched to
add the new routes.
“The issue is, is it good public policy or is it personal use of
power for personal convenience,” UC Irvine political science
professor Mark Petracca said of the congressmen’s lobbying on behalf
of Aloha.
If the airline was being pressured to offer the flight as a
condition of approval from the transportation department, that would
be inappropriate, but the congressmen’s support seems to be
potentially in the public interest, he said.
“They’re helping an airline, and in helping an airline they’re
helping themselves, and in helping themselves they’re conceivably
helping the public,” Petracca said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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