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Return to Virginia Business - February 2005

News & Features


Fare play
Airports without discount airlines seek a competitive advantage

by Chip Jones
Virginia Business

February 2005

Amid the updrafts and downdrafts of the airline industry — with US Airways recently teetering on the brink of liquidation and other carriers like United sputtering along in bankruptcy protection — consider the workings of a little-known economic principle: the banana factor.

READER RESOURCES
Related story: Independence Air has trouble gaining altitude
Web Pointers: For more information
Richmond International Airport
Roanoke Regional Airport
Charlottesville-Albemarle County Airport

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Jacqueline Shuck, executive director of the Roanoke Regional Airport Commission, hit upon this concept as she tried to explain the forces buffeting regional airports. Small and medium-size market airports in Roanoke, Lynchburg, Charlottesville and Richmond all face the loss of business that comes when bargain-hunting passengers flee to other airports to save a few hundred bucks for that last-minute business trip to Atlanta, New York or L.A. It’s called “leakage,” and it’s a problem for which there are no easy answers. In fact, about the only solution is to land a low-fare carrier — as Newport News and Norfolk have — or to combine discount carriers and high-volume service (as in Northern Virginia at Reagan National and Washington Dulles International airports).

As the airports see their core passenger base — business travelers — looking for ways to trim ticket costs, they’d like nothing better than to order up a discount airline. But just as food vendors are the ones who stock many supermarket shelves, air service is provided by the airlines. “The frustrating thing is that the community looks at us as the actual service provider, when in reality, we are only the facility. … It’s sort of like you’re in the grocery business, but you can’t buy the bananas,” says Shuck.

Federal regulations strictly forbid airport managers from playing favorites with airlines. “I can’t go negotiate a deal with United Airlines to bring service into Roanoke, especially at some particular fare,” explains Shuck.
In fact airport executives have little leverage in placing orders with the hottest banana-vendors on the airline block — Southwest, JetBlue, AirTran and other low-fare salesmen. Ever since Congress deregulated the airlines more than 20 years ago, the free market has been at play, sometimes for better (low fares and more choices for consumers), sometimes for worse (high fares and undependable service).

So how can regional airports compete? For when it comes to factors that determine an area’s business climate — whether it’s attracting or retaining employers — the quality of air service is key. Just ask any bedraggled business traveler who’s had to drive two or three extra hours to another airport to get a better deal on a ticket, or an economic development recruiter who has just lost a prospect to another city with better fares.
Last year many airport directors and commissioners became proactive, raising money or lobbying for federal grants to help create war chests to do battle in the heated fare wars.

During 2004, fares took wild swings, with prices as low as $29 one-way from startups like Independence Air, which lifted off last summer with so much promise at Washington Dulles International Airport only to see revenues slump. By year’s end, Independence — like the older “legacy” carriers” — was staring down the dark maw of bankruptcy court protection.

US Airways, already fighting for its life, suffered an operational meltdown in Philadelphia at Christmas as baggage and ticket handlers called in sick for the holiday. This Grinch-like move snarled the entire East Coast air system, leaving thousands of travelers stranded and countless bags lost. It also prompted analysts to wonder whether this was an early death knell for the Arlington-based airline.

But the airline gained some breathing room in mid-January. A federal bankruptcy judge approved the extension of an interim financing deal between US Airways and the federal Air Transportation Stabilization Board until June 30. That is when the airline hopes to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Before the judge’s decision, US Airways had obtained concessions worth $800 million annually from its unions. The airline had warned that it would have been forced to liquidate without the extension. The extension also is expected to help the airline seal a leasing and financing deal with General Electric Co., which would improve US Airway’s liquidity. The airline still must find an investor willing to pump $250 million into a company that has sought bankruptcy court protection twice since 2002.

With such a constant state of flux, airport leaders have had to be as nimble as an NFL player. Unless they could find a way to tackle a low-fare carrier, they were left out in the cold.

Consider the travel game being played out in the state capital: Richmond International Airport estimates that nearly 845,000 passengers a year flee to six other airports in the region. And, until recently, those business travelers that had to fly out of their hometown airport wound up paying dearly for the privilege. In early 2004, the federal transportation department said Richmond ranked fifth for high-ticket prices among the nation’s airports. “Historically, we’ve been the one subsidizing the other airports,” says Jon Mathiasen, Richmond International’s chief executive and president.

Mathiasen and his bosses at the Capital Region Airport Commission decided to attack the problem head on. After a near miss in 2001 —when discount king Southwest Airlines announced plans to come to the capital only to postpone them because of 9/11 — Richmond’s air service created a chronic case of civic heartburn. Among corporate recruiters, it ranked just after the city’s high crime rate in the list of things that deter companies from moving to the area. Companies who picked up their computers and fax machines and moved to the Raleigh-Durham area to do business near a low-fare airport also blamed Richmond’s air service.
Gregory Wingfield, president of the Greater Richmond Partnership, the area’s economic development organization, says he’ll never know how many companies have shunned Richmond over the years because of its high-altitude fare structure. But he knows the problem scared off one corporate prospect. When Louisiana Pacific Corp. — an Oregon-based paper company — was looking to move its headquarters last year, Richmond made the list of three finalists, along with Nashville and Charlotte. “You’d think Charlotte would be competitive because of its airport, but the ticket prices there were actually higher” than Richmond’s, says Wingfield. Nashville eventually won the relocation sweepstakes because of its lower fares. “It was a deal-breaker,” Wingfield says.

Such lost opportunities sent blood pressure soaring among members on Richmond’s airport commission, especially Beverley “Booty” Armstrong, a principal of CCA Industries Inc., which owns The Jefferson Hotel. He became a driving force behind the airport commission’s decision to send its top gun, Mathiasen, out on a mission to bring down the fares.
Something had to be done, Armstrong explains, because “the airline industry is so volatile.” The veteran executive knew that business negatives could be turned into positives. Richmond’s high fares may cause people to flee the airport now, but they also prove that Virginia’s capital is ripe for the plucking for a low-fare carrier or any one of the airport’s six “legacy” carriers willing to drop prices in return for a larger chunk of the travel pie.

Working with the Greater Richmond Chamber of Commerce, Richmond International managed to secure a $950,000 federal grant that could be used to sweeten the pot for any airline willing to make a dramatic fare cut at the airport. Coupled with matching funds from the Chamber, airport chief Mathiasen is armed with a war chest of more than $2 million to finance his crusade. “He’s been put on this thing full time,” Wingfield says. “That’s his job. So to me, this really underscores the seriousness that everybody is placing on getting a low-cost carrier, or a restructured legacy carrier, in here with lower costs.”

The campaign continues. In mid-November, Richmond claimed a significant victory after Delta Air Lines announced it would drop business and leisure fares from Richmond to nine key cities. Delta officials committed to cutting half its walk-up fares of more than $1,000, driving them down to the $450-range in two key markets, New York and Atlanta. Armstrong called Delta’s fare restructuring “a good first step,” adding, “I don’t think it’s the end of the hunt.” (Delta announced a nationwide plan in January that would cut its most expensive fares and eliminate many restrictions.)
Richmond’s hunt for fare relief illustrates the kind of aggressive strategy needed in today’s tenuous business climate. As US Airways’ fate has been sorted out in bankruptcy court, Virginia airport officials have been on guard, thinking about what they would do if the airline was permanently grounded. They were encouraged by news of the extension of US Airways’ interim financing deal. Bryan Elliott, executive director of the Charlottesville-Albemarle Airport, says that he is cautiously optimistic that the airline will emerge from bankruptcy and reinvent itself. The development, he notes, would be a great benefit for cities by served the airline along the East Coast.

US Airways commands about 50 percent of the total passenger base in Charlottesville, with 16 of 26 daily departures. Its market share rises higher in Lynchburg (60 percent), and is about 40 percent in Roanoke and 30 percent in Richmond.

The turbulence in the airline industry isn’t limited to US Airways, with its high cost structure and bruising competition from Southwest Airlines in Philadelphia. After losing billions of dollars in revenue after the 2001 terrorist attacks crippled the industry, every one of America’s commercial airlines has been buffeted by market forces the likes of which veterans say they’ve never seen before. The downdraft actually began before the 9/11 attacks, Elliott says. “The industry has been in a constant state of flux since late 2000, when the airlines started seeing a downfall in capacity to attract the high-yield business traveler. Moving forward has been one calamity after another.”

Mark Courtney, airport director at Lynchburg Regional Airport, expects things to clear up by mid-2005. “I almost feel that we’re in a situation where things for us are going to be quite a bit better or quite a bit worse.”

What’s clear is that airport directors need to start analyzing the motives of those “banana suppliers” — the airlines.

***

Darryl Jenkins, a visiting professor at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida, says, “I have been in this business since 1971 and have never seen it as intense as it is right now. I have never seen the revenue environment as weak as it is.”

The days of courting an airline and giving it time to build up popularity in a new market are as antiquated as an eight-track tape. “There’s no more saying we’ll start service, and in two years perhaps we’ll make a profit,” Richmond’s Mathiasen says. “They want instant revenue-producing operations.”

Yet an overpriced market like Richmond actually can prove attractive, says Jenkins, who’s a consultant for the airport. “You’re a wealthy community ripe for the plucking,” Jenkins says, “You have very successful, large businesses that fly to other large cities, with no low-fare competition.”

Jenkins predicts that JetBlue Airways will decide to start service in Virginia’s capital by next year. But the New York-based airline — while making overtures to Gov. Mark R. Warner — has played its cards, and its planes, close to its vest, setting no timetable for the expansion.
Another top airline analyst says it’s important for regional airports not to count on hitting the low-fare jackpot. “There are lots of charlatans selling snake oil promising they’ll do a $50,000 study and bring new air service to a community,” says Mike Boyd, head of The Boyd Group Inc., an airline consulting firm in Denver that has worked with Virginia airports. “Too many communities think, ‘If we keep studying it, we’ll find a cure.’ Well, there ain’t no cure,” he says.

Some civic officials think Southwest is a panacea to all of their problems with the traditional, so-called “legacy,” airlines. Nonsense, says Boyd. “There are people who say let the big airlines go out of business, and Southwest will be there. Southwest will not be in Lynchburg. That’s just ridiculous. You’re more likely to get a moon launch than Southwest.”
In Charlottesville, the Central Virginia airport serves a core area with more than 150,000 people, including well-healed travelers from the University of Virginia. But that doesn’t mean the folks from Southwest or JetBlue are going to be knocking down the door, says Elliott. “Where are the discount carriers in the markets of 150,000?” he asked. “They’re looking for population mass.”

What airports can do is “support the service you have,” Boyd observes. Officials simply must accept that “you’ll have people driving away” for cheaper tickets, whether they’re to be found at Dulles, Raleigh-Durham or Newport News. “You want to make sure your core business base continues to use your airport because that’s the kind of air service the business needs.”

Airports can, however, lobby airlines for equitable fares, something airport directors already do on a regular basis. “Price parity is something we’ve always tried to work on,” Elliott says. “If something seems to be amiss, we pick up the phone and call the airlines.”

He also tells his Charlottesville-based fliers that driving to Dulles or BWI might save money in the short run but it can exact hidden costs. “We try to impress on people the soft cost of driving to another airport,” Elliott says. “What’s the value of your time? Do you really want to be stuck out in Loudoun County and make multiple transfers to get to the front door of the airport building?”

All in all, it seems that Virginia’s airports are faring better than much of the rest of the country. “I’m not worried about the Roanokes of the world, or really anything in Virginia,” Boyd says. “Where we have real challenges are rural places with no interstates.”

Parts of Kansas and Colorado, for example, are becoming “air-service blighted” because of the airline industry’s downsizing and a lack of interest by any commercial airlines, he says.

***

So the vultures aren’t circling over the airport terminals of Virginia. And all four airports lacking low-fare service have established close links with their key constituency: the business traveler. That loyalty was evident in Roanoke in early 2003 when the airport, helped by the Chamber of Commerce, raised about $2 million in commitments to use AirTran Airways, then a prime candidate for Star City service. “We anticipated it would take about six months to put this together,” says Beth Doughty, president of the Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce. “It took hardly anytime at all. The response was so dramatic.”

The chamber presented AirTran with the pledge program — often called a “travel bank,” guaranteeing a level of commitment to use the airline if it came to Roanoke. In the end, AirTran “didn’t say no” but “didn’t say yes either,” Doughty says.

The Roanoke travel bank was put on hold after AirTran decided to focus on larger markets. But Roanoke’s business community, which remains interested in AirTran and Independence Air, could take pride in getting pledges from about 100 businesses. The effort also generated fresh data and contacts that may prove valuable in future talks with airlines interested in flying out of the commercial hub of Southwest Virginia. “When you work with these airlines, they never ask the same question twice,” Doughty noted. “You have to craft the information different ways for different prospects. It’s not that different from industrial prospects.”

Roanoke is not waiting for a low-fare savior to swoop over Mill Mountain. The regional airport, with a market area of about 800,000 people, boasts an airline lineup that would be the envy of other cities its size. Besides US Airways and Delta, it has service from Northwest Airlines to Detroit, and United Airlines to Chicago and Washington Dulles.

While some Roanokers drive to Greensboro and Charlotte, Doughty says, “You’re really in a situation to say, ‘Support your local airport.’ We attempt to provide whatever services we can,” including free wireless Internet access in the airport terminal. “When you can’t compete on fares, you try to find other ways to compete.”

Lynchburg also has established an airport-business coalition. A 2003 air service campaign, helped by a $500,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation, “was an unqualified success,” Courtney, the airport director, says. “It was a case study in how it should work.”

The federal grant was used to provide guaranteed revenue for up to a year to Delta for flying three times a day between Lynchburg and Atlanta. By the end of the year, “We were exceeding the target profit margin” set by Delta. “So they didn’t need the revenue guarantee anymore,” he says. “We are still maintaining a high passenger load on these flights.”

The chamber chipped in a $100,000 to run a series of print ads and TV commercials with the theme “Use it or lose it,” says Christine Kennedy, vice president of business development for the Lynchburg Regional Chamber of Commerce. “We created a buzz,” she says. When Delta dropped its fares to Atlanta, “ridership went off the wall as soon as that happened. Slowly but surely, the community as a whole has decided to come back to Lynchburg.”

The liftoff to Atlanta taught Lynchburg that “you have to say you want the service and then you have to prove it,” Kennedy says. “You prove it by using it.”

Certainly that’s been the experience in Richmond, where Delta’s fare restructuring has been an instant hit with business travelers who now have an option to driving on traffic-choked interstates to the north and east just to get lower prices on airline tickets.

Richmond’s experience teaches a lesson as old as the Olympics: the importance of competition. The airport conducted a study in late 2004 that showed US Airways and Continental started matching Delta’s lower fares to New York-area airports, with round-trip tickets selling for as low as $188. “Richmond for the first time is seeing competitive fares in some of its markets,” says Mathiasen, adding, “It’s just the start.”

Return to Virginia Business - February 2005


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