Ultra-low-cost carrier Avelo is restructuring its network and closing crew bases after a recent cash infusion.
In a statement, the airline said it will streamline its network around four current bases – New Haven, Connecticut; Wilmington, Delaware; Charlotte/Concord, North Carolina; and Lakeland, Florida. Crew bases in Mesa, Arizona, and Raleigh-Durham and Wilmington in North Carolina will close.
Avelo said it will continue serving Raleigh-Durham from New Haven and Rochester, New York, and Wilmington, North Carolina, from Nashville, Tennessee; New Haven; Tampa, Florida; and Baltimore/Washington.
It was not immediately clear when the bases would be shut down, and the carrier did not say if there would be layoffs.

Airline officials acknowledged the restructuring will come with schedule changes “that will impact many customer itineraries” but did not disclose the affected routes. Passengers will be notified of relevant changes directly through email and text messages, they said.
Routes currently served by Avelo but not listed as continuing in its announcement include Raleigh to Grand Rapids, Michigan, and Albany, New York, and Wilmington, North Carolina, to Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, and Orlando in Florida; Detroit; Washington Dulles; Rochester; Manchester, New Hampshire; and Islip, New York.
Wilmington International Airport said in a statement Tuesday that all of the affected destinations are served by other airlines, including Delta, United, American, JetBlue, Breeze, and Sun Country. The changes will come into effect in late January, it said.
Avelo also said it will open a new crew base at McKinney National Airport in Texas later this year. The general aviation airport is currently building a commercial airline terminal, and Avelo is its first confirmed passenger airline.
Fleet Changes
Airline officials also announced plans to retire six Boeing 737-700 aircraft. This will leave Avelo operating mainly with the more efficient 737-800, they said.
The carrier in September ordered up to 100 Embraer E195‑E2s to modernize its fleet.

