Freedom Airlines

Summary

Freedom Airlines, Inc. was an American FAA Part 121 certificated air carrier operating under air carrier certificate number FDKA087K[1] issued on April 1, 2002. A Nevada corporation,[2] it was headquartered in Irving, Texas and a subsidiary of Mesa Air Group.[3] It operated flights as Delta Connection for Delta Air Lines serving Delta's hub at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport in Hebron, KY, near Cincinnati, OH using EMB 145 aircraft. Freedom's base moved to Cincinnati from New York City in July 2009. Freedom previously operated the CRJ-900 aircraft for Delta Connection as well; however, this contract was canceled and all aircraft were transferred to Eagan, MN-based Mesaba Airlines, Atlanta, GA-based Atlantic Southeast Airlines, and Pinnacle Airlines.

Freedom Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
F8 FRL FREEDOM AIR
Founded2002
Ceased operations2010
HubsCincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport
Frequent-flyer programSkyMiles
AllianceSkyTeam
Fleet size34
Destinations24
Parent companyDelta Air Lines and Mesa Air Group, Inc.
HeadquartersIrving, Texas, USA
Key peopleRyan Gumm (COO)
Websitehttp://www.mesa-air.com

A unrelated commuter airline using the name Freedom Airlines operating independently during the 1980s flying scheduled passenger service with Convair 580 and Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner turboprops. This earlier version of Freedom Airlines served the eastern U.S. including destinations in Massachusetts, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Virginia including Washington D.C.[4][5]

History edit

The airline was established in March 2002 and started operations in October 2002. It was the launch customer for the Bombardier CRJ-900. The airline was started so that Mesa Air Group could fulfill its contractual obligations to operate the CRJ-900 as America West Express for America West Airlines. Establishing Freedom was necessary as Mesa Airlines was also operating as US Airways Express under a code share agreement for US Airways. US Airways' collective bargaining agreement with the Air Line Pilots Association prohibited contract carrier code share arrangements with regional jet carriers, if that carrier operated aircraft with more than 70 seats. Mesa Airlines, therefore, could not operate as US Airways Express and operate the CRJ-900.

Initially Freedom operated the Bombardier CRJ-700 and CRJ-900 on behalf of America West Airlines. Once US Airways' pilot scope limitation was relaxed, Mesa transferred the operation of all of Freedom's regional jets to Mesa Airlines. Once this transfer was complete Freedom placed 1 Beech 1900D turboprop on its certificate in order to keep the certificate active. No scheduled flights occurred during this period with the Beech 1900, but it was used as a spare aircraft for Air Midwest aircraft flying out of Phoenix under an America West Express codeshare as well as a spare aircraft for Mesa Airlines' Dash-8-200 aircraft operating under a contract for America West. In October 2005, Freedom Airlines began operations as Delta Connection.

ERJ-145 Contract edit

On April 7, 2008, Mesa Air Group, the parent company of Freedom Airlines, entered litigation about contractual obligations with Delta Air Lines.[6] Delta attempted to terminate the ERJ-145 contract due to supposed failures to meet completion in 3 of the last 6 months. On May 29, 2008, a federal judge blocked Delta from terminating Freedom's regional flying contract which, according to parent company Mesa Air Group would have forced it to file for bankruptcy protection by July 20 and cut 700 jobs or 14 percent of its work force.[7] Since then, the ERJ-145 fleet has been reduced to 22 operating aircraft along with 5 spares.

CRJ-900 Contract edit

In August 2008, Mesa announced that Delta was terminating Freedom's contract to operate CRJ-900 aircraft. As with the ERJ-145 contract, Mesa alleged that the cancellation was driven by Delta's intention to cut capacity rather than Freedom's failure to meet operational performance standards, as Delta claims.[8] However, unlike the ERJ-145 contract, Delta's attempt to cancel the contract was successful. The seven CRJ-900s were returned to Delta with no further financial obligation to Mesa. They were being operated by Pinnacle Airlines until they received the last of their CRJ-900s orders. After that, 5 were operated by Mesaba Airlines. The other 2 were operated by Atlanta-based Atlantic Southeast Airlines.[9]

Shutdown edit

In May 2010, a federal judge ruled against regional carrier Mesa Air Group in the long-running dispute with Delta Air Lines over the larger carrier's right to cancel a regional jet service contract.[10] Mesa said in a statement that it may now have to lay off 500 workers at its Freedom Airlines subsidiary because 22 of its regional jets will be without work. On August 31, 2010, the last flight for Freedom Airlines operated.[11]

Fleet at time of closure edit

The Freedom Airlines fleet at the time it ceased operations consisted of the following aircraft:

Aircraft In fleet Passengers
Embraer ERJ-145 34 50

Retired fleet edit

Freedom Airlines Retired fleet
Aircraft Year Retired Replacement Notes
de Havilland Canada Dash 8-100 2007 Embraer ERJ-145 Acquired in 2006 for Delta Connection flights at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK.)
Bombardier CRJ900 2008 n/a Leased monthly from Delta for $1.00 per aircraft per month [12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Federal Aviation Administration - Airline Certificate Information - Detail View
  2. ^ "Form 10-K (2006)". Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  3. ^ "Certlist.htm Archived 2009-05-28 at the Wayback Machine." United States Department of Transportation. Retrieved on August 11, 2009.
  4. ^ "A Source for Airline History". AirTimes. Retrieved 2019-10-29.
  5. ^ "Airline Timetable Images". Timetableimages.com. Retrieved 2019-10-29.
  6. ^ "Delta, Mesa in connection flight clash". Cincinnati Business Journal. 2008-04-02. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  7. ^ Judge blocks Delta's termination of Mesa contract[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Delta terminates regional contract with Mesa Air". Phoenix Business Journal. 2008-08-05. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  9. ^ "Yahoo Finance - Stock Market Live, Quotes, Business & Finance News". Biz.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2019-10-29.
  10. ^ Christie, Bob (18 May 2010). "Judge rules for Delta in dispute with Mesa Air". AZCentral.com. AP. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  11. ^ Snyder, Brett (30 September 2010). "Mesa Air Group Shows Everything That's Wrong with the Bankruptcy Code". BNET. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  12. ^ "Phoenix stories". www.bizjournals.com. August 4, 2008. Retrieved 2019-10-29.

External links edit

  • Mesa Air Group Website