Denver Gets New Airline
Denver International Airport is slated to add a new airline to its mix. Twenty-seven carriers serve the Colorado airport.
Denver International Airport is slated to add a new airline to its mix. Twenty-seven carriers serve the Colorado airport.
JetBlue announced Wednesday that it would be adding five brand-new destinations to its North American East Coast network.
United’s Washington to Bozeman flight previously held the No. 1 spot. This summer, though, the nearly 1,800-mile route will be operated by Airbus A319s.
Delta’s much-welcomed competition to the two small Alaskan airports will be coming to an end, with the airline not returning next season.
Qantas has not yet provided information on how long the carrier expects these flight disruptions to continue into the future.
On the heels of its breakup with CRJ-200 operator Air Wisconsin, American is also detailing plans to end all 50-seat service from Chicago this summer.
Alaska is set to add three more routes from both Portland and Medford, Oregon, later this year, two of which are new to the airline’s network.
The regional carrier announced the shake-up on Friday afternoon, which includes a broader focus on government-subsidized service.
One Arizona airport will see scheduled flights again after a half-century hiatus. Safford Regional Airport lost all air service in 1975.
McClellan-Palomar Airport in Carlsbad, California, will once again regain daily commercial flights starting on Feb. 13 following county approval.