Operating Limitations at Newark Liberty International Airport, 29550-29566 [08-1278]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 99 / Wednesday, May 21, 2008 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
[Docket No. FAA–2008–0221]
Operating Limitations at Newark
Liberty International Airport
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Order Limiting Scheduled
Operations at Newark Liberty
International Airport.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In a proposed order published
on March 18, 2008, the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) tentatively
identified the parameters of an order
that would temporarily limit scheduled
flight operations at Newark Liberty
International Airport (EWR).1 The FAA
issued the proposal as a result of
persistent congestion and delays at EWR
during the peak operating hours, as well
as a dramatic projected increase in flight
delays at the airport during the summer
of 2008 if proposed schedules were
implemented as requested by carriers.
After evaluating the written comment
submitted to the public docket in this
matter, the FAA is issuing this final
Order, which will take effect at 6 a.m.,
Eastern Time, on June 20, 2008.
If you wish to review the background
documents or comments received in this
proceeding, you may go to https://
www.regulations.gov at any time and
follow the online instructions for
accessing the electronic docket. You
may also go to the U.S. Department of
Transportation’s Docket Operations in
Room W12–140 on the ground floor of
the West Building at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gerry Shakley, System Operations
Services, Air Traffic Organization;
telephone—(202) 267–9424; e-mail—
gerry.shakley@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Background
EWR has historically experienced a
significant number of delays relative to
the other airports in the domestic
system. When ranked according to the
proportion of delayed operations, EWR
has frequently been the most delayed
airport in the country. Moreover, EWR’s
on-time performance has deteriorated in
recent years. The percent of on-time gate
arrivals within 15 minutes of the
scheduled time decreased from 70.66%
in fiscal year (FY) 2000 to 63.97% in FY
2006 and to 61.71% in FY 2007. The
average daily counts of arrival delays
greater than one hour were 54 in FY
2000; 79 in FY 2006; and 93 in FY 2007,
an increase of almost 18% in the last
fiscal year alone.
One of the factors contributing to the
EWR’s declining performance has been
the carriers’ scheduling practices at the
airport. Daily operations have been
relatively stable while delays have
continued to increase. In Fiscal Year
(FY) 2000, there were 1,253 average
daily operations. In FY 2007, there were
1,219 average daily operations, a
decrease of about 3 percent. Demand
during the most desirable peak hours,
however, approached or exceeded the
average runway capacity resulting in
volume-related delays. The cumulative
impact of such scheduling by all carriers
can result in delays even under ideal
weather conditions. However, the
resulting delays become even more
pronounced when weather or other
operating conditions reduce the
airport’s capacity below optimal levels.
During the summer of 2007, in
addition to the delays experienced at
EWR, another New York-area airport,
John F. Kennedy International Airport
(JFK), also experienced significant
congestion-related delays. Based on
both airports’ summer 2007
performance, and in the absence of any
major capacity enhancing projects, the
FAA designated the airports as Level 2,
Schedules Facilitated Airports for the
summer 2008 scheduling season, in
accordance with the International Air
Transport Association (IATA)
Worldwide Scheduling Guidelines.2 In
designating the airports as IATA Level
2, Schedules Facilitated Airports, the
FAA required all U.S. and foreign air
carriers to report to the FAA their
proposed summer 2008 scheduled
operations at the airports during
designated hours. With respect to EWR,
the FAA specifically noted that it
intended to work with carriers on the
flight operations planned from 7 until
10 a.m. and from 2 until 10 p.m.,
Eastern Time.3 The FAA further
specified that it was considering its
options to ‘‘further address congestion
and improve operational performance at
EWR, including the timing of flights at
the airport and their impact on the
airport’s operation.’’ 4
The information that U.S. and foreign
air carriers reported to the FAA
regarding their proposed operations at
EWR reflected a significant increase in
scheduled operations, especially during
2 72
FR 54,317 (Sept. 24, 2007).
at 54,318.
3 Id.,
1 73
FR 14,552 (Mar. 18, 2008).
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4 Id.
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the most oversubscribed hours when the
airport routinely experienced delays.
U.S. and foreign air carriers requested
about 100 new operations, adding to the
schedules that produced pronounced
delays during summer 2007. The
proposed schedules in the afternoon
and evening period were of the greatest
concern. For example, several
consecutive hours would have had
demand for arrivals or departures in the
mid-90s and others in the upper 80s. By
contrast, EWR’s adjusted average airport
capacity reflects that, from September
2006 through August 2007, the airport
handled or was capable of handling an
average of 83 operations per hour.
The FAA modeled the level of delays
that passengers transiting EWR could
expect if the carriers were to operate the
summer 2008 schedules that they
proposed. When compared with EWR’s
modeled baseline delays during the
summer of 2007, the average arrival
delays would have increased 38% to 35
minutes; the average number of arrival
delays of at least one hour would have
increased 50%; and the mean arrival
delay would have reached almost 80
minutes by 7 p.m. The proposed
schedules also would have negatively
affected departures.5
In response to the U.S. and foreign air
carriers’ proposed summer 2008
schedules, the FAA held discussions
with many of the carriers to validate
their schedule requests and to ask them
to reconsider their proposed timings in
light of the airport’s capacity
limitations. Although there were some
modest revisions to the proposed
schedules, it was clear that demand
would continue to exceed capacity
without further action, as some carriers
indicated that they would operate as
proposed despite the FAA’s concern
about the impact on delays. In addition,
the FAA anticipated that carriers might
try to add still more operations at EWR
when a forthcoming operational
limitation took effect at nearby JFK,6 in
effect shifting a portion of that problem
to an already oversubscribed EWR. As a
result, the FAA elected to modify EWR’s
IATA designation to a Level 3,
Coordinated Airport for summer 2008.7
This designation provided notice, in
accordance with international norms,
that the FAA would focus proposed new
operations at the airport on hours
during which airport capacity is
5 As with previous aircraft queuing model runs
produced for the FAA by the MITRE Corporation’s
Center for Advanced Aviation System
Development, it was assumed that no scheduled
operation was cancelled.
6 73 FR 3,510 (Jan. 18, 2008) (order limiting
scheduled operations at JFK).
7 72 FR 73,418 (Dec. 27, 2007).
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available and to deny proposed new
operations during oversubscribed hours.
Some carriers, including Continental
Airlines, the primary hub carrier at
EWR, moved flights from historic peak
hours to less congested times in order to
assist with delay reduction. The FAA
published in the appendix to the
proposed order the results of the
discussions with U.S. and foreign air
carriers and our approved schedules
reflecting very limited peak-hour
growth.8 While the proposed order,
through the appendix, provided the
public with notice of the state of the
FAA’s discussions with carriers under
the IATA Worldwide Scheduling
Guideline process, the principal
purpose of the proposed order was to
describe and to raise for public
comment a series of practical
considerations that the FAA must
address when it undertakes to place a
temporary limit on operations at an
airport.
II. Summary and Analysis of the
Comments
As of May 1, 2008 the FAA received
in the public docket 78 written
comments on the FAA’s proposed order.
The vast majority of the commenters
support the FAA’s effort, as a general
matter, to control congestion and delays
at EWR. A small number of comments
question certain aspects of the FAA’s
proposal.
One commenter—Virgin America,
Inc.—expresses its preference that the
FAA had followed a different process in
limiting operations at EWR. Virgin
America specifically would prefer that
the FAA had conducted a scheduling
reduction meeting for scheduled
operations at EWR, as the FAA did in
limiting scheduled operations at JFK.
The FAA holds a number of options
in controlling congestion at a particular
airport. As the FAA articulated when it
requested the carriers’ anticipated
summer 2008 schedules involving EWR,
the FAA considered them all in
selecting its course with respect to EWR.
There is no requirement that the FAA
pursue a particular avenue in
addressing airport congestion, and small
differences in a particular airport’s
operations can argue for a slightly
different solution. The FAA’s election to
improve the carriers’ scheduling and
EWR’s performance through a
combination of the IATA scheduling
process and a voluntary drawing down
of carriers’ schedules during the
oversubscribed hours was a rational
method of addressing congestion-related
delay at the airport. Moreover, and
8 73
FR at 14,558–65.
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equally important, it was both an
expedient course and a permissible
exercise of the FAA’s discretion.
Nor is it apparent that conducting a
scheduling reduction meeting like that
held for JFK would have led to a
different result than that expressed in
the proposed order for EWR. The FAA
published both JFK’s and EWR’s
designation as IATA Level 2, Schedules
Facilitated Airports in the same
document.9 The starting point for the
FAA’s discussions with carriers at the
subsequent scheduling reduction
meeting for JFK was the proposed
schedules that the carriers submitted
pursuant to JFK’s designation as an
IATA Level 2, Schedules Facilitated
Airport. Many carriers at JFK, including
those with the largest presence at the
airport, agreed to reduce flights during
the most desirable hours in order to
improve operational performance and to
benefit all operators. At the same time,
the FAA ensured that other carriers
were restricted from adding new flights
during the previously oversubscribed
hours, which would have offset the
delay reduction that the other carriers’
schedule adjustments achieved. The
FAA accommodated a few timely
requested new operations during the
hours of peak demand.
The FAA applied the same general
policy approach at EWR, with the
objective of preventing a further
degradation in operational performance
by keeping demand within the average
available capacity. We recognize Virgin
America’s position that it did not take
advantage of the IATA schedule
submission requirement or the initial
ensuing IATA schedule discussions
regarding EWR. As a result, in
consideration of Virgin America’s newly
advanced request for scheduled
operations, the FAA attempted to
accommodate Virgin America during
the hours that are scheduled below the
airport’s adjusted average hourly
capacity. The discussions leading to the
FAA’s proposed order, including the
conversations with Virgin America,
necessarily had the same tenor as a
scheduling reduction meeting’s
discussions. If the FAA were to conduct
a scheduling reduction meeting for
EWR, we do not expect that the product
would differ materially from the results
published in the appendix to the
proposed order.
9 Although
Virgin America identified its intention
to conduct operations at JFK during summer 2008,
it filed no such intention in response to EWR’s
IATA Level 2 designation. After the FAA declared
EWR an IATA Level 3, Fully Coordinated Airport,
Virgin America indicated for the first time a desire
to provide scheduled service there.
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Virgin America and the Air Carrier
Association of America also state that
the proposed order diminishes the
ability of new entrants to compete at
EWR and strengthens the position of
EWR’s hub carrier. In particular, Virgin
America notes the potential that more
established carriers could abuse the
proposed mechanisms of retiming
operations and permitting operational
growth at EWR. Virgin America and the
Air Carrier Association of America
recommend a periodic withdrawal and
redistribution of Operating
Authorizations to stimulate
competition. We emphasize, however,
that we intended the proposed order to
describe a short-term vehicle to preserve
realistic scheduling at EWR while
longer term solutions are applied to
relieve EWR’s congestion and delay.
The mechanisms that we identified to
permit operational flexibility and
growth within the airport’s capacity, if
applied fairly and without
discrimination, should provide
opportunities during the relatively brief
duration of this final Order. While we
anticipate that all carriers will conduct
their transactions under this Order in a
principled way, the FAA will closely
monitor the operation of the airport and
the application of the mechanisms for
the trade and lease of Operating
Authorizations while this Order remains
in effect. If we detect unfair or
anticompetitive behavior, we will not
hesitate to take corrective action and to
propose more stringent controls on such
transactions in the future.
One commenter—Porter Airlines,
Inc.—requests an amendment to the
appendix of the proposed order to grant
it fourteen total operations at EWR
during the time periods that it originally
requested of the FAA. Porter contends
that it received an approved schedule
from the EWR Terminal/Gate Schedules
Facilitator and that the FAA should
allow it to operate that schedule. Porter,
as well as the Air Transport Association
of Canada, also contends that the FAA’s
proposed allocations would violate the
U.S.-Canada Open Skies Agreement. In
a supplemental filing, Porter asks the
FAA to reconsider the allocation of
Operating Authorizations to Porter if
any Operating Authorization becomes
available in the future, such as by the
revised operating plans of other
carriers.10
10 Eos Airlines, for example, recently ceased
operations after April 27, 2008. Eos does not have
historic scheduled operations at EWR, and it has
not commenced the operations it planned to
conduct at EWR this summer and for which the
FAA proposed to allocate Operating Authorizations.
Because Eos has ceased to conduct scheduled
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Throughout the process that led to the
FAA’s proposed order, the FAA’s
representatives were candid during and
after the IATA Schedules Conference in
November 2007 regarding the potential
for restricted operations at EWR,
particularly in the already
oversubscribed afternoon and evening
hours. The FAA expressly made Porter
aware that it was not granting approval,
based on runway capacity, for all
Porter’s proposed new operations
during the peak hours, that the FAA was
continuing to seek voluntary moves by
carriers to retime schedule requests, and
that any plans to conduct scheduled
operations during those periods would
be at Porter’s own risk. Consistent with
the FAA’s preliminary assessment of the
operational impact of the carriers’
proposed schedules, the FAA
determined that it was necessary to
modify EWR’s designation from Level 2
to Level 3 when it became clear that
voluntary schedule adjustments by the
carriers to avoid the overscheduling of
EWR’s peak hours were not achievable.
With respect to the FAA’s proposed
allocation of Operating Authorizations,
the U.S.–Canada Open Skies Agreement
requires the FAA to accord fair and
equal, not preferential, treatment.
Contrary to Porter Airlines’ suggestion,
the FAA’s proposal treats Porter
Airlines identically to all air carriers
that are similarly situated at EWR. In
addition, like all other carriers, Porter
Airlines will retain the flexibility under
this Order to trade, to lease, and to
request retimings of its scheduled
operations to enhance its competitive
posture. Retiming of an approved
Operating Authorization for any carrier,
however, would be granted only if
capacity exists, if the FAA determines
that it does not diminish the efficiency
of the airport’s operations, and if it is
otherwise consistent with the provisions
and policies expressed in this Order.
Porter’s request in its supplemental
filing for an additional two Operating
Authorizations in the 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.
hours and its request to retime an
approved arrival in the 9 p.m. half hour
to the 8 p.m. hour are denied. Shifting
a 9 p.m. half hour flight to the earlier,
more problematic hours would increase
congestion and would not be equitable
to other carriers that are unable to make
similar moves. As a carrier that did not
have any historic operations at EWR but
that timely indicated that it would
provide summer 2008 service, Porter
Airlines was permitted one new
roundtrip during the airport’s busiest
operations, the FAA is not allocating Operating
Authorizations to Eos in the appendix to this final
Order.
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period, from 3 p.m. through 8:59 p.m.
The FAA proposed similar allocations
for two other new entrant carriers that
timely indicated their intention to
initiate service at EWR. By contrast,
other carriers, including those with a
limited existing presence at the airport,
were not permitted to add new flights
during those hours. In addition, other
carriers either removed or rescheduled
some historically conducted operations
during that period to reduce delays.
Adding even a few flights to that period
diminishes the delay reduction benefits
that the voluntary moves of other
carriers have achieved. Accordingly, the
FAA’s manner of accommodating new
entrant carriers at EWR is adopted as
proposed.
Air Canada, the Air Transport
Association of America, and American
Airlines recommend adjustments to the
FAA’s proposed 80% usage requirement
for Operating Authorizations. They
request that the FAA consider an
Operating Authorization as used if the
carrier elects to cancel a flight due to a
ground delay program. The Air
Transport Association and American
Airlines further request that the FAA
consider an Operating Authorization
used if the carrier elects to cancel a
flight because a de-icing program is in
effect.
For the present time, the FAA has
decided not to amend the proposal to
include categorical exclusions from the
minimum usage requirement for flight
cancellations for reasons such as ground
delay or de-icing programs. In arriving
at this conclusion, we understand that,
during extreme conditions of extended
delays or reduced capacity, carriers may
find it necessary or practical to cancel
a flight rather than conduct it several
hours later. In such situations, carriers
might accommodate passengers
efficiently on other flights, permitting
carriers to work on overall network
recovery through a tactical use of flight
cancellations. Moreover, under these
circumstances, flight cancellations may
deliver operational benefits to the
National Airspace System, because
delays would be even longer for all
system users absent flight cancellations
during reduced capacity conditions.
Nevertheless, we must balance these
considerations against the overall
efficient use of a scarce operational
resource. The proposed minimum usage
requirement permits carriers to suspend
flights for operational reasons up to
20% of the time. Furthermore, the FAA
may waive the usage requirement in the
face of highly unusual and
unpredictable conditions that are
beyond the control of the carriers and
that affect carrier operations for at least
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five consecutive days. Under normal
circumstances, this degree of flexibility
should be sufficient to absorb the
occasional cancellation of a scheduled
operation and still permit carriers to
meet the minimum usage threshold, if
the planned usage is near 100%.
Carriers that do not schedule operations
for all their assigned authority increase
the risk of falling below the minimum
usage threshold, and it is not the FAA’s
intention to facilitate a carrier’s
underutilization of an Operating
Authorization by granting additional
usage exceptions.11 While this Order is
in effect, the FAA invites carriers to
highlight specific instances in which the
available measures appear insufficient.
Such information may provide the good
cause necessary to modify this Order.
The Air Transport Association and
American Airlines submitted comments
on the FAA’s proposed termination of
the Order on October 24, 2009. In their
opinion, the FAA could avoid the lack
of certainty that a potential series of
short-term extensions would cause if the
FAA would tie the Order’s expiration
date to the effective date of a
replacement rule. They note that such
an approach was effective in the FAA
order capping scheduled operations at
LaGuardia Airport.
The FAA originally considered
whether the termination date of this
Order should be open-ended, tied to the
adoption of a replacement rule, or as
proposed, identified as a date certain.
We rejected the notion of leaving this
Order open-ended or tying its expiration
to the effective date of a replacement
rule. This Order is constructed to
provide short-term relief from the
congestion that EWR would otherwise
experience. We do not deem it
appropriate as a longer-term structure
for EWR’s operations. Accordingly, we
will retain the Order’s proposed
expiration date.
American Airlines suggests that the
FAA’s proposal to require carriers to use
an Operating Authorization for 90 days
before leasing or transferring it should
be changed. Because Operating
Authorizations were not previously
assigned at EWR, American Airlines
instead contends that a 90-day usage
requirement in this context should look
back to the period that carriers
conducted the underlying historic
11 We further note that, under this Order, carriers
may return Operating Authorizations to the FAA on
or before the seasonal deadline for the periods
during which the carriers do not intend to use
them. This allows carriers to adjust their seasonal
allocation to match more precisely the carriers’
known schedules at the time of the deadline.
Additionally, this Order creates a secondary market
for the transfer of Operating Authorizations to
another carrier that is able to use them.
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operations before the final Order takes
effect. According to American Airlines,
the market for Operating Authorizations
would otherwise be suppressed for most
of the summer 2008 scheduling
season—a prospect that Porter Airlines
also views negatively in its comments.
To facilitate the secondary market for
Operating Authorizations during the
summer of 2008, the FAA agrees that
this limitation should be amended to
permit an earlier lease or transfer of
Operating Authorizations that
correspond to historically conducted
operations with one caveat. In
particular, we remain concerned about a
potential abuse here and in the future of
the process under which the FAA
arrives at the final allocations, whereby
a carrier could accept Operating
Authorizations to conduct new
operations while also attempting to
control via lease the operator of the
carriers’ historically conducted
operations. This could serve as a
disincentive for carriers to discuss their
schedule plans in good faith, it is unfair
to carriers that have concrete plans to
serve the airport, and it could afford a
carrier control over a greater share of the
airport’s operations than any portion
that the carrier ever conducted there.
Therefore, the FAA will amend the final
Order to permit the lease or transfer of
Operating Authorizations whenever the
carrier can demonstrate that it operated
the flight that corresponds to the
Operating Authorization at least 80% of
the 90-day period immediately
preceding the lease or transfer.
However, we will monitor the net effect
of the carriers’ lease transactions with
respect to their newly allocated
Operating Authorizations. If it is
apparent that a carrier requested
Operating Authorizations that it did not
intend to utilize, the FAA may consider
that circumstance in assessing the
carrier’s future representations with
respect to its need for capacity at this or
other airports.
Kalitta Air, LLC, comments that it is
uniquely burdened by the proposed
order due to its contract with the United
States Postal Service (USPS) to carry
mail for the U.S. military. It indicates
that it regularly operates 10 or more
departures from EWR each week but
that the number and time of the flights
may vary to meet the contractual
requirements. Kalitta further notes that
some periods of the year, such as the
December holidays, have historically
generated more flights and that it must
operate additional flights to
accommodate the mail during other
times, as well. Kalitta cites as possible
solutions a large pool of authority for
day-of unscheduled operations, the use
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of ‘‘extra section’’ authority, and a
reduction in the hours when operational
limits will apply at EWR. Kalitta also
indicates it would like to revise its
historic summer 2007 schedules to
operate at different times.
The FAA understands that all carriers
may need to revise their plans to
conduct scheduled operations at EWR
after this Order takes effect. The FAA
intends to issue a proposal to institute
a reservations system for unscheduled
flights, and some of the issues that
Kalitta raises regarding the availability
of last-minute operations will be
addressed in that context. A finite
number of reservations are expected for
unscheduled operations during the peak
hours; however, there is a potential for
additional reservations for last-minute
unscheduled operations if operating and
delay conditions permit. We expect that
the ultimate structure for scheduled and
unscheduled operations will
accommodate the historic patterns of
demand that cargo operators experience
during particular times of year, such as
the months of November and December,
but some retiming of proposed
schedules may be required.
The type of operational flexibility that
Kalitta seeks to conduct operations
during EWR’s busiest hours is not
practical, given the airport’s limited
capacity and trend toward congestionrelated delays. The service that Kalitta
provides to meet its USPS contract may
be unique in its individual
circumstances, but it does not materially
differ as a practical matter from the
limitations imposed on other operators.
In some respects, cargo operations may
have options that are not reasonably
available to passenger-carrying and
other operators, permitting flights at
less-congested times. To this degree, it
may be easier for a cargo operator to
trade for or lease Operating
Authorizations at favorable times than is
the case for other carriers operating at
EWR.
As with other carriers, the FAA will
not accept changes from a cargo
operator’s historic operations if the net
result would be increased congestion.
For example, the FAA cannot approve
Kalitta’s request to move a flight from
the 9 p.m. hour to the 7 p.m. hour.
Nevertheless, the FAA will work with
Kalitta—as it will continue to do with
other carriers—on schedule
adjustments, but those adjustments
must recognize the limits under this
Order.
A number of the commenters express
opinions regarding the FAA’s future
allocation of Operating Authorizations
at EWR. American Airlines advocates
the FAA’s long-term use of the IATA
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Worldwide Scheduling Guidelines at all
congested airports, whereas the Air
Carrier Association of America opposes
the FAA’s reliance on the Worldwide
Scheduling Guidelines. The Air
Transport Association of America, the
Air Transport Association of Canada,
and American Airlines oppose the
FAA’s use of auctions to allocate new or
returned capacity at EWR, and the Air
Carrier Association of America
identifies alternative market-based
allocation concepts.
The FAA’s principal purpose in
issuing the proposed order was to curb
the overscheduling that passengers
transiting EWR would experience
during the summer of 2008 if the FAA
failed to intervene. This final Order will
result in significantly better
performance at the airport than would
occur if carriers were to implement the
schedules that they originally proposed.
The manner in which the FAA will
allocate operational authority to
conduct scheduled operations after this
Order expires will be the subject of a
rulemaking proceeding in a separate
docket. Carriers that wish to register an
opinion regarding that proposal should
file their responsive written comments
in the public docket that the FAA will
open for that proceeding.
Regarding the language in the
proposed order that refers to a future
auction of new and returned capacity at
EWR while this final Order remains in
effect, the FAA does not anticipate the
immediate availability of a significant
volume of new or returned capacity at
EWR. However, the FAA expects that
the need may arise to conduct an
auction of new or returned capacity at
EWR or JFK before the end of this
calendar year. If this proves to be true,
we anticipate that we would allocate
such capacity for a 5- to 10-year term.
The FAA has authority to lease real and
personal property, including intangible
property, to others. 49 U.S.C. 106(l)(6)
and 106(n). Because the auction would
address an FAA lease of Operating
Authorizations awarded by the FAA
under its leasing authority rather than
under an administrative allocation,
notice to the interested parties will be
governed by applicable procurement
law, rather than by the Administrative
Procedure Act. The details regarding a
potential auction will be disclosed
when the FAA is ready to proceed with
an auction. In accordance with the
FAA’s Acquisition Management System,
the FAA will publicly announce its
intention to conduct an auction on a
particular date or over the course of a
particular period of time. The FAA will
also announce its proposed auction
procedures and solicit comments on
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those procedures. The FAA will
consider the comments that it receives
and then publish the final auction
procedures. Any interested party will
have an avenue to protest the
procedures up until the date of the
auction, in accordance with 49 U.S.C.
40110(d)(4) and 14 CFR Part 17.
The individual and non-airline
organizational commenters express
nearly universal support for the
proposed limit on scheduled operations
at EWR, primarily because they view it
as an alternative to the delay reduction
anticipated from New York-New JerseyPhiladelphia airspace redesign. The
airspace redesign project to which they
refer is an initiative that is independent
of this temporary limitation on flights at
EWR, and it will reduce congestionrelated delay in that region over the long
term. The FAA will implement elements
of the airspace redesign over five years,
and as a result, the full benefit of the
redesign will be realized in stages. By
contrast, this Order will provide
temporary relief from the heightened
delays that the region would experience
as early as this summer if carriers were
permitted to operate the schedules that
they proposed. The FAA does not
intend this Order to serve as a long-term
solution to congestion-related delay at
and around EWR.
Accordingly, with respect to
scheduled flight operations at EWR, it is
ordered that:
1. This Order assigns operating
authority to conduct an arrival or a
departure at EWR during the affected
hours to the U.S. air carrier or foreign
air carrier identified in the appendix to
this Order. The FAA will not assign
operating authority under this Order to
any person or entity other than a
certificated U.S. or foreign air carrier
with appropriate economic authority
and FAA operating authority under 14
CFR Part 121, 129, or 135. This Order
applies to the following:
a. All U.S. air carriers and foreign air
carriers conducting scheduled
operations at EWR as of the date of this
Order, any U.S. air carrier or foreign air
carrier that operates under the same
designator code as such a carrier, and
any air carrier or foreign-flag carrier that
has or enters into a codeshare agreement
with such a carrier.
b. All U.S. air carriers or foreign air
carriers initiating scheduled or regularly
conducted commercial service to EWR
while this Order is in effect.
c. The Chief Counsel of the FAA, in
consultation with the Vice President,
System Operations Services, is the final
decision-maker for determinations
under this Order.
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2. This Order governs scheduled
arrivals and departures at EWR from 6
a.m. through 10:59 p.m., Eastern Time,
Sunday through Saturday.
3. This Order takes effect at 6 a.m.,
Eastern Time, on June 20, 2008, and
expires at 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on
October 24, 2009.
4. Under the authority provided to the
Secretary of Transportation and the
FAA Administrator by 49 U.S.C. 40101,
40103 and 40113, we hereby order that:
a. No U.S. air carrier or foreign air
carrier initiating or conducting
scheduled or regularly conducted
commercial service at EWR may
conduct such operations without an
Operating Authorization assigned by the
FAA.
b. Except as provided in the appendix
to this Order, scheduled U.S. air carrier
and foreign air carrier arrivals and
departures will not exceed 81 per hour
from 6 a.m. through 10:59 p.m., Eastern
Time.
c. The Administrator may change the
limits if he determines that capacity
exists to accommodate additional
operations without a significant increase
in delays.
5. For administrative tracking
purposes only, the FAA will assign an
identification number to each Operating
Authorization.
6. A carrier holding an Operating
Authorization may request the
Administrator’s approval to move any
arrival or departure scheduled from 6
a.m. through 10:59 p.m. to another half
hour within that period. Except as
provided in paragraph seven, the carrier
must receive the written approval of the
Administrator, or his delegate, prior to
conducting any scheduled arrival or
departure that is not listed in the
appendix to this Order. All requests to
move an allocated Operating
Authorization must be submitted to the
FAA Slot Administration Office,
facsimile (202) 267–7277 or e-mail 7AWA-Slotadmin@faa.gov, and must
come from a designated representative
of the carrier. If the FAA cannot approve
a carrier’s request to move a scheduled
arrival or departure, the carrier may
then apply for a trade in accordance
with paragraph seven.
7. A carrier may lease or trade an
Operating Authorization to another
carrier for any consideration and for a
period that does not exceed the duration
of this Order. A carrier may not lease an
Operating Authorization to another
carrier unless it has actually used the
authorization to conduct flights to or
from Newark at least 80% of the time
over the preceding 90-day period. The
FAA may waive the 90-day usage
requirement of the Operating
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Authorization if the transferring carrier
can demonstrate that it has operated the
flight that corresponds to the Operating
Authorization at least 80% of the time
over the 90 days preceding the proposed
transfer of the Operating Authorization.
Notice of a trade or lease under this
paragraph must be submitted in writing
to the FAA Slot Administration Office,
facsimile (202) 267–7277 or e-mail 7AWA-Slotadmin@faa.gov, and must
come from a designated representative
of each carrier. The FAA must confirm
and approve these transactions in
writing prior to the effective date of the
transaction. The FAA will approve
transfers between carriers under the
same marketing control up to five
business days after the actual operation,
but only to accommodate operational
disruptions that occur on the same day
of the scheduled operation.
8. A carrier may not buy, sell, trade,
or transfer an Operating Authorization,
except as described in paragraph seven.
9. Historical rights to Operating
Authorizations and withdrawal of those
rights due to insufficient usage will be
determined on a seasonal basis and in
accordance with the schedule approved
by the FAA prior to the commencement
of the applicable season.
a. For each day of the week that the
FAA has approved an operating
schedule, any Operating Authorization
not used at least 80% of the time over
the period authorized by the FAA under
this paragraph will be withdrawn by the
FAA for the next applicable season
except:
i. The FAA will treat as used any
Operating Authorization held by a
carrier on Thanksgiving Day, the Friday
following Thanksgiving Day, and the
period from December 24 through the
first Saturday in January.
ii. The Administrator of the FAA may
waive the 80% usage requirement in the
event of a highly unusual and
unpredictable condition which is
beyond the control of the carrier and
which affects carrier operations for a
period of five consecutive days or more.
b. Each carrier holding an Operating
Authorization must forward in writing
to the FAA Slot Administration Office a
list of all Operating Authorizations held
by the carrier and for each Operating
Authorization. These reports must
include:
i. The dates within each applicable
season on which it intends to start and
to cease scheduled operations.
A. For the Summer 2008 scheduling
season, the report must be received by
the FAA no later than June 20, 2008.
B. For the Winter 2008/2009
scheduling season, the report must be
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received by the FAA no later than
August 15, 2008.
C. For the Summer 2009 scheduling
season, the report must be received by
the FAA no later than January 15, 2009.
ii. The completed operations for each
day of the applicable scheduling season:
A. Via an interim report filed no later
than September 1 for the Summer
scheduling season;
B. Via an interim report filed no later
than January 15 for the Winter
scheduling season.
iii. A final report of the completed
operations for each day of the
scheduling season within 30 days after
the last day of the applicable scheduling
season.
10. In the event that a carrier
surrenders to the FAA any Operating
Authorization assigned to it under this
Order or if there are unallocated
Operating Authorizations, the FAA will
determine whether the unallocated
Operating Authorizations should be
reallocated. The FAA may temporarily
allocate an Operating Authorization if it
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Jkt 214001
determines that such allocation will not
increase congestion at the airport. Such
temporary allocations will not be
entitled to historical status for the next
applicable scheduling season under
paragraph 9.
11. If the FAA determines that a
reduction in the number of allocated
Operating Authorizations is required to
meet operational needs, such as reduced
airport capacity, the FAA will conduct
a weighted lottery to withdraw
Operating Authorizations to meet a
reduced hourly or half-hourly limit for
scheduled operations. The FAA will
provide at least 45 days’ notice unless
otherwise required by operational
needs. Any Operating Authorization
that is withdrawn or temporarily
suspended will, if reallocated, be
reallocated to the carrier from which it
was taken, provided that the carrier
continues to operate scheduled service
at EWR.
12. The FAA will enforce this Order
through an enforcement action seeking
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29555
a civil penalty under 49 U.S.C. 46301(a).
A carrier that is not a small business as
defined in the Small Business Act, 15
U.S.C. § 632, will be liable for a civil
penalty of up to $25,000 for every day
that it violates the limits set forth in this
Order. A carrier that is a small business
as defined in the Small Business Act
will be liable for a civil penalty of up
to $10,000 for every day that it violates
the limits set forth in this Order. The
FAA also could file a civil action in U.S.
District Court, under 49 U.S.C. 46106,
46107, seeking to enjoin any air carrier
from violating the terms of this Order.
13. The FAA may modify or withdraw
any provision in this Order on its own
or on application by any carrier for good
cause shown.
Issued in Washington, DC, on May 15,
2008.
Robert A. Sturgell,
Acting Administrator, Federal Aviation
Administration.
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[FR Doc. 08–1278 Filed 5–16–08; 12:00 pm]
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29566
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 99 (Wednesday, May 21, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29550-29566]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 08-1278]
[[Page 29550]]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
[Docket No. FAA-2008-0221]
Operating Limitations at Newark Liberty International Airport
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Order Limiting Scheduled Operations at Newark Liberty
International Airport.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In a proposed order published on March 18, 2008, the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) tentatively identified the parameters of
an order that would temporarily limit scheduled flight operations at
Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR).\1\ The FAA issued the
proposal as a result of persistent congestion and delays at EWR during
the peak operating hours, as well as a dramatic projected increase in
flight delays at the airport during the summer of 2008 if proposed
schedules were implemented as requested by carriers. After evaluating
the written comment submitted to the public docket in this matter, the
FAA is issuing this final Order, which will take effect at 6 a.m.,
Eastern Time, on June 20, 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 73 FR 14,552 (Mar. 18, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you wish to review the background documents or comments received
in this proceeding, you may go to https://www.regulations.gov at any
time and follow the online instructions for accessing the electronic
docket. You may also go to the U.S. Department of Transportation's
Docket Operations in Room W12-140 on the ground floor of the West
Building at 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gerry Shakley, System Operations
Services, Air Traffic Organization; telephone--(202) 267-9424; e-mail_
gerry.shakley@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
EWR has historically experienced a significant number of delays
relative to the other airports in the domestic system. When ranked
according to the proportion of delayed operations, EWR has frequently
been the most delayed airport in the country. Moreover, EWR's on-time
performance has deteriorated in recent years. The percent of on-time
gate arrivals within 15 minutes of the scheduled time decreased from
70.66% in fiscal year (FY) 2000 to 63.97% in FY 2006 and to 61.71% in
FY 2007. The average daily counts of arrival delays greater than one
hour were 54 in FY 2000; 79 in FY 2006; and 93 in FY 2007, an increase
of almost 18% in the last fiscal year alone.
One of the factors contributing to the EWR's declining performance
has been the carriers' scheduling practices at the airport. Daily
operations have been relatively stable while delays have continued to
increase. In Fiscal Year (FY) 2000, there were 1,253 average daily
operations. In FY 2007, there were 1,219 average daily operations, a
decrease of about 3 percent. Demand during the most desirable peak
hours, however, approached or exceeded the average runway capacity
resulting in volume-related delays. The cumulative impact of such
scheduling by all carriers can result in delays even under ideal
weather conditions. However, the resulting delays become even more
pronounced when weather or other operating conditions reduce the
airport's capacity below optimal levels.
During the summer of 2007, in addition to the delays experienced at
EWR, another New York-area airport, John F. Kennedy International
Airport (JFK), also experienced significant congestion-related delays.
Based on both airports' summer 2007 performance, and in the absence of
any major capacity enhancing projects, the FAA designated the airports
as Level 2, Schedules Facilitated Airports for the summer 2008
scheduling season, in accordance with the International Air Transport
Association (IATA) Worldwide Scheduling Guidelines.\2\ In designating
the airports as IATA Level 2, Schedules Facilitated Airports, the FAA
required all U.S. and foreign air carriers to report to the FAA their
proposed summer 2008 scheduled operations at the airports during
designated hours. With respect to EWR, the FAA specifically noted that
it intended to work with carriers on the flight operations planned from
7 until 10 a.m. and from 2 until 10 p.m., Eastern Time.\3\ The FAA
further specified that it was considering its options to ``further
address congestion and improve operational performance at EWR,
including the timing of flights at the airport and their impact on the
airport's operation.'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 72 FR 54,317 (Sept. 24, 2007).
\3\ Id., at 54,318.
\4\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The information that U.S. and foreign air carriers reported to the
FAA regarding their proposed operations at EWR reflected a significant
increase in scheduled operations, especially during the most
oversubscribed hours when the airport routinely experienced delays.
U.S. and foreign air carriers requested about 100 new operations,
adding to the schedules that produced pronounced delays during summer
2007. The proposed schedules in the afternoon and evening period were
of the greatest concern. For example, several consecutive hours would
have had demand for arrivals or departures in the mid-90s and others in
the upper 80s. By contrast, EWR's adjusted average airport capacity
reflects that, from September 2006 through August 2007, the airport
handled or was capable of handling an average of 83 operations per
hour.
The FAA modeled the level of delays that passengers transiting EWR
could expect if the carriers were to operate the summer 2008 schedules
that they proposed. When compared with EWR's modeled baseline delays
during the summer of 2007, the average arrival delays would have
increased 38% to 35 minutes; the average number of arrival delays of at
least one hour would have increased 50%; and the mean arrival delay
would have reached almost 80 minutes by 7 p.m. The proposed schedules
also would have negatively affected departures.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ As with previous aircraft queuing model runs produced for
the FAA by the MITRE Corporation's Center for Advanced Aviation
System Development, it was assumed that no scheduled operation was
cancelled.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the U.S. and foreign air carriers' proposed summer
2008 schedules, the FAA held discussions with many of the carriers to
validate their schedule requests and to ask them to reconsider their
proposed timings in light of the airport's capacity limitations.
Although there were some modest revisions to the proposed schedules, it
was clear that demand would continue to exceed capacity without further
action, as some carriers indicated that they would operate as proposed
despite the FAA's concern about the impact on delays. In addition, the
FAA anticipated that carriers might try to add still more operations at
EWR when a forthcoming operational limitation took effect at nearby
JFK,\6\ in effect shifting a portion of that problem to an already
oversubscribed EWR. As a result, the FAA elected to modify EWR's IATA
designation to a Level 3, Coordinated Airport for summer 2008.\7\ This
designation provided notice, in accordance with international norms,
that the FAA would focus proposed new operations at the airport on
hours during which airport capacity is
[[Page 29551]]
available and to deny proposed new operations during oversubscribed
hours. Some carriers, including Continental Airlines, the primary hub
carrier at EWR, moved flights from historic peak hours to less
congested times in order to assist with delay reduction. The FAA
published in the appendix to the proposed order the results of the
discussions with U.S. and foreign air carriers and our approved
schedules reflecting very limited peak-hour growth.\8\ While the
proposed order, through the appendix, provided the public with notice
of the state of the FAA's discussions with carriers under the IATA
Worldwide Scheduling Guideline process, the principal purpose of the
proposed order was to describe and to raise for public comment a series
of practical considerations that the FAA must address when it
undertakes to place a temporary limit on operations at an airport.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 73 FR 3,510 (Jan. 18, 2008) (order limiting scheduled
operations at JFK).
\7\ 72 FR 73,418 (Dec. 27, 2007).
\8\ 73 FR at 14,558-65.
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II. Summary and Analysis of the Comments
As of May 1, 2008 the FAA received in the public docket 78 written
comments on the FAA's proposed order. The vast majority of the
commenters support the FAA's effort, as a general matter, to control
congestion and delays at EWR. A small number of comments question
certain aspects of the FAA's proposal.
One commenter--Virgin America, Inc.--expresses its preference that
the FAA had followed a different process in limiting operations at EWR.
Virgin America specifically would prefer that the FAA had conducted a
scheduling reduction meeting for scheduled operations at EWR, as the
FAA did in limiting scheduled operations at JFK.
The FAA holds a number of options in controlling congestion at a
particular airport. As the FAA articulated when it requested the
carriers' anticipated summer 2008 schedules involving EWR, the FAA
considered them all in selecting its course with respect to EWR. There
is no requirement that the FAA pursue a particular avenue in addressing
airport congestion, and small differences in a particular airport's
operations can argue for a slightly different solution. The FAA's
election to improve the carriers' scheduling and EWR's performance
through a combination of the IATA scheduling process and a voluntary
drawing down of carriers' schedules during the oversubscribed hours was
a rational method of addressing congestion-related delay at the
airport. Moreover, and equally important, it was both an expedient
course and a permissible exercise of the FAA's discretion.
Nor is it apparent that conducting a scheduling reduction meeting
like that held for JFK would have led to a different result than that
expressed in the proposed order for EWR. The FAA published both JFK's
and EWR's designation as IATA Level 2, Schedules Facilitated Airports
in the same document.\9\ The starting point for the FAA's discussions
with carriers at the subsequent scheduling reduction meeting for JFK
was the proposed schedules that the carriers submitted pursuant to
JFK's designation as an IATA Level 2, Schedules Facilitated Airport.
Many carriers at JFK, including those with the largest presence at the
airport, agreed to reduce flights during the most desirable hours in
order to improve operational performance and to benefit all operators.
At the same time, the FAA ensured that other carriers were restricted
from adding new flights during the previously oversubscribed hours,
which would have offset the delay reduction that the other carriers'
schedule adjustments achieved. The FAA accommodated a few timely
requested new operations during the hours of peak demand.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Although Virgin America identified its intention to conduct
operations at JFK during summer 2008, it filed no such intention in
response to EWR's IATA Level 2 designation. After the FAA declared
EWR an IATA Level 3, Fully Coordinated Airport, Virgin America
indicated for the first time a desire to provide scheduled service
there.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA applied the same general policy approach at EWR, with the
objective of preventing a further degradation in operational
performance by keeping demand within the average available capacity. We
recognize Virgin America's position that it did not take advantage of
the IATA schedule submission requirement or the initial ensuing IATA
schedule discussions regarding EWR. As a result, in consideration of
Virgin America's newly advanced request for scheduled operations, the
FAA attempted to accommodate Virgin America during the hours that are
scheduled below the airport's adjusted average hourly capacity. The
discussions leading to the FAA's proposed order, including the
conversations with Virgin America, necessarily had the same tenor as a
scheduling reduction meeting's discussions. If the FAA were to conduct
a scheduling reduction meeting for EWR, we do not expect that the
product would differ materially from the results published in the
appendix to the proposed order.
Virgin America and the Air Carrier Association of America also
state that the proposed order diminishes the ability of new entrants to
compete at EWR and strengthens the position of EWR's hub carrier. In
particular, Virgin America notes the potential that more established
carriers could abuse the proposed mechanisms of retiming operations and
permitting operational growth at EWR. Virgin America and the Air
Carrier Association of America recommend a periodic withdrawal and
redistribution of Operating Authorizations to stimulate competition. We
emphasize, however, that we intended the proposed order to describe a
short-term vehicle to preserve realistic scheduling at EWR while longer
term solutions are applied to relieve EWR's congestion and delay. The
mechanisms that we identified to permit operational flexibility and
growth within the airport's capacity, if applied fairly and without
discrimination, should provide opportunities during the relatively
brief duration of this final Order. While we anticipate that all
carriers will conduct their transactions under this Order in a
principled way, the FAA will closely monitor the operation of the
airport and the application of the mechanisms for the trade and lease
of Operating Authorizations while this Order remains in effect. If we
detect unfair or anticompetitive behavior, we will not hesitate to take
corrective action and to propose more stringent controls on such
transactions in the future.
One commenter--Porter Airlines, Inc.--requests an amendment to the
appendix of the proposed order to grant it fourteen total operations at
EWR during the time periods that it originally requested of the FAA.
Porter contends that it received an approved schedule from the EWR
Terminal/Gate Schedules Facilitator and that the FAA should allow it to
operate that schedule. Porter, as well as the Air Transport Association
of Canada, also contends that the FAA's proposed allocations would
violate the U.S.-Canada Open Skies Agreement. In a supplemental filing,
Porter asks the FAA to reconsider the allocation of Operating
Authorizations to Porter if any Operating Authorization becomes
available in the future, such as by the revised operating plans of
other carriers.\10\
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\10\ Eos Airlines, for example, recently ceased operations after
April 27, 2008. Eos does not have historic scheduled operations at
EWR, and it has not commenced the operations it planned to conduct
at EWR this summer and for which the FAA proposed to allocate
Operating Authorizations. Because Eos has ceased to conduct
scheduled operations, the FAA is not allocating Operating
Authorizations to Eos in the appendix to this final Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 29552]]
Throughout the process that led to the FAA's proposed order, the
FAA's representatives were candid during and after the IATA Schedules
Conference in November 2007 regarding the potential for restricted
operations at EWR, particularly in the already oversubscribed afternoon
and evening hours. The FAA expressly made Porter aware that it was not
granting approval, based on runway capacity, for all Porter's proposed
new operations during the peak hours, that the FAA was continuing to
seek voluntary moves by carriers to retime schedule requests, and that
any plans to conduct scheduled operations during those periods would be
at Porter's own risk. Consistent with the FAA's preliminary assessment
of the operational impact of the carriers' proposed schedules, the FAA
determined that it was necessary to modify EWR's designation from Level
2 to Level 3 when it became clear that voluntary schedule adjustments
by the carriers to avoid the overscheduling of EWR's peak hours were
not achievable.
With respect to the FAA's proposed allocation of Operating
Authorizations, the U.S.-Canada Open Skies Agreement requires the FAA
to accord fair and equal, not preferential, treatment. Contrary to
Porter Airlines' suggestion, the FAA's proposal treats Porter Airlines
identically to all air carriers that are similarly situated at EWR. In
addition, like all other carriers, Porter Airlines will retain the
flexibility under this Order to trade, to lease, and to request
retimings of its scheduled operations to enhance its competitive
posture. Retiming of an approved Operating Authorization for any
carrier, however, would be granted only if capacity exists, if the FAA
determines that it does not diminish the efficiency of the airport's
operations, and if it is otherwise consistent with the provisions and
policies expressed in this Order.
Porter's request in its supplemental filing for an additional two
Operating Authorizations in the 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. hours and its request
to retime an approved arrival in the 9 p.m. half hour to the 8 p.m.
hour are denied. Shifting a 9 p.m. half hour flight to the earlier,
more problematic hours would increase congestion and would not be
equitable to other carriers that are unable to make similar moves. As a
carrier that did not have any historic operations at EWR but that
timely indicated that it would provide summer 2008 service, Porter
Airlines was permitted one new roundtrip during the airport's busiest
period, from 3 p.m. through 8:59 p.m. The FAA proposed similar
allocations for two other new entrant carriers that timely indicated
their intention to initiate service at EWR. By contrast, other
carriers, including those with a limited existing presence at the
airport, were not permitted to add new flights during those hours. In
addition, other carriers either removed or rescheduled some
historically conducted operations during that period to reduce delays.
Adding even a few flights to that period diminishes the delay reduction
benefits that the voluntary moves of other carriers have achieved.
Accordingly, the FAA's manner of accommodating new entrant carriers at
EWR is adopted as proposed.
Air Canada, the Air Transport Association of America, and American
Airlines recommend adjustments to the FAA's proposed 80% usage
requirement for Operating Authorizations. They request that the FAA
consider an Operating Authorization as used if the carrier elects to
cancel a flight due to a ground delay program. The Air Transport
Association and American Airlines further request that the FAA consider
an Operating Authorization used if the carrier elects to cancel a
flight because a de-icing program is in effect.
For the present time, the FAA has decided not to amend the proposal
to include categorical exclusions from the minimum usage requirement
for flight cancellations for reasons such as ground delay or de-icing
programs. In arriving at this conclusion, we understand that, during
extreme conditions of extended delays or reduced capacity, carriers may
find it necessary or practical to cancel a flight rather than conduct
it several hours later. In such situations, carriers might accommodate
passengers efficiently on other flights, permitting carriers to work on
overall network recovery through a tactical use of flight
cancellations. Moreover, under these circumstances, flight
cancellations may deliver operational benefits to the National Airspace
System, because delays would be even longer for all system users absent
flight cancellations during reduced capacity conditions.
Nevertheless, we must balance these considerations against the
overall efficient use of a scarce operational resource. The proposed
minimum usage requirement permits carriers to suspend flights for
operational reasons up to 20% of the time. Furthermore, the FAA may
waive the usage requirement in the face of highly unusual and
unpredictable conditions that are beyond the control of the carriers
and that affect carrier operations for at least five consecutive days.
Under normal circumstances, this degree of flexibility should be
sufficient to absorb the occasional cancellation of a scheduled
operation and still permit carriers to meet the minimum usage
threshold, if the planned usage is near 100%. Carriers that do not
schedule operations for all their assigned authority increase the risk
of falling below the minimum usage threshold, and it is not the FAA's
intention to facilitate a carrier's underutilization of an Operating
Authorization by granting additional usage exceptions.\11\ While this
Order is in effect, the FAA invites carriers to highlight specific
instances in which the available measures appear insufficient. Such
information may provide the good cause necessary to modify this Order.
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\11\ We further note that, under this Order, carriers may return
Operating Authorizations to the FAA on or before the seasonal
deadline for the periods during which the carriers do not intend to
use them. This allows carriers to adjust their seasonal allocation
to match more precisely the carriers' known schedules at the time of
the deadline. Additionally, this Order creates a secondary market
for the transfer of Operating Authorizations to another carrier that
is able to use them.
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The Air Transport Association and American Airlines submitted
comments on the FAA's proposed termination of the Order on October 24,
2009. In their opinion, the FAA could avoid the lack of certainty that
a potential series of short-term extensions would cause if the FAA
would tie the Order's expiration date to the effective date of a
replacement rule. They note that such an approach was effective in the
FAA order capping scheduled operations at LaGuardia Airport.
The FAA originally considered whether the termination date of this
Order should be open-ended, tied to the adoption of a replacement rule,
or as proposed, identified as a date certain. We rejected the notion of
leaving this Order open-ended or tying its expiration to the effective
date of a replacement rule. This Order is constructed to provide short-
term relief from the congestion that EWR would otherwise experience. We
do not deem it appropriate as a longer-term structure for EWR's
operations. Accordingly, we will retain the Order's proposed expiration
date.
American Airlines suggests that the FAA's proposal to require
carriers to use an Operating Authorization for 90 days before leasing
or transferring it should be changed. Because Operating Authorizations
were not previously assigned at EWR, American Airlines instead contends
that a 90-day usage requirement in this context should look back to the
period that carriers conducted the underlying historic
[[Page 29553]]
operations before the final Order takes effect. According to American
Airlines, the market for Operating Authorizations would otherwise be
suppressed for most of the summer 2008 scheduling season--a prospect
that Porter Airlines also views negatively in its comments.
To facilitate the secondary market for Operating Authorizations
during the summer of 2008, the FAA agrees that this limitation should
be amended to permit an earlier lease or transfer of Operating
Authorizations that correspond to historically conducted operations
with one caveat. In particular, we remain concerned about a potential
abuse here and in the future of the process under which the FAA arrives
at the final allocations, whereby a carrier could accept Operating
Authorizations to conduct new operations while also attempting to
control via lease the operator of the carriers' historically conducted
operations. This could serve as a disincentive for carriers to discuss
their schedule plans in good faith, it is unfair to carriers that have
concrete plans to serve the airport, and it could afford a carrier
control over a greater share of the airport's operations than any
portion that the carrier ever conducted there. Therefore, the FAA will
amend the final Order to permit the lease or transfer of Operating
Authorizations whenever the carrier can demonstrate that it operated
the flight that corresponds to the Operating Authorization at least 80%
of the 90-day period immediately preceding the lease or transfer.
However, we will monitor the net effect of the carriers' lease
transactions with respect to their newly allocated Operating
Authorizations. If it is apparent that a carrier requested Operating
Authorizations that it did not intend to utilize, the FAA may consider
that circumstance in assessing the carrier's future representations
with respect to its need for capacity at this or other airports.
Kalitta Air, LLC, comments that it is uniquely burdened by the
proposed order due to its contract with the United States Postal
Service (USPS) to carry mail for the U.S. military. It indicates that
it regularly operates 10 or more departures from EWR each week but that
the number and time of the flights may vary to meet the contractual
requirements. Kalitta further notes that some periods of the year, such
as the December holidays, have historically generated more flights and
that it must operate additional flights to accommodate the mail during
other times, as well. Kalitta cites as possible solutions a large pool
of authority for day-of unscheduled operations, the use of ``extra
section'' authority, and a reduction in the hours when operational
limits will apply at EWR. Kalitta also indicates it would like to
revise its historic summer 2007 schedules to operate at different
times.
The FAA understands that all carriers may need to revise their
plans to conduct scheduled operations at EWR after this Order takes
effect. The FAA intends to issue a proposal to institute a reservations
system for unscheduled flights, and some of the issues that Kalitta
raises regarding the availability of last-minute operations will be
addressed in that context. A finite number of reservations are expected
for unscheduled operations during the peak hours; however, there is a
potential for additional reservations for last-minute unscheduled
operations if operating and delay conditions permit. We expect that the
ultimate structure for scheduled and unscheduled operations will
accommodate the historic patterns of demand that cargo operators
experience during particular times of year, such as the months of
November and December, but some retiming of proposed schedules may be
required.
The type of operational flexibility that Kalitta seeks to conduct
operations during EWR's busiest hours is not practical, given the
airport's limited capacity and trend toward congestion-related delays.
The service that Kalitta provides to meet its USPS contract may be
unique in its individual circumstances, but it does not materially
differ as a practical matter from the limitations imposed on other
operators. In some respects, cargo operations may have options that are
not reasonably available to passenger-carrying and other operators,
permitting flights at less-congested times. To this degree, it may be
easier for a cargo operator to trade for or lease Operating
Authorizations at favorable times than is the case for other carriers
operating at EWR.
As with other carriers, the FAA will not accept changes from a
cargo operator's historic operations if the net result would be
increased congestion. For example, the FAA cannot approve Kalitta's
request to move a flight from the 9 p.m. hour to the 7 p.m. hour.
Nevertheless, the FAA will work with Kalitta--as it will continue to do
with other carriers--on schedule adjustments, but those adjustments
must recognize the limits under this Order.
A number of the commenters express opinions regarding the FAA's
future allocation of Operating Authorizations at EWR. American Airlines
advocates the FAA's long-term use of the IATA Worldwide Scheduling
Guidelines at all congested airports, whereas the Air Carrier
Association of America opposes the FAA's reliance on the Worldwide
Scheduling Guidelines. The Air Transport Association of America, the
Air Transport Association of Canada, and American Airlines oppose the
FAA's use of auctions to allocate new or returned capacity at EWR, and
the Air Carrier Association of America identifies alternative market-
based allocation concepts.
The FAA's principal purpose in issuing the proposed order was to
curb the overscheduling that passengers transiting EWR would experience
during the summer of 2008 if the FAA failed to intervene. This final
Order will result in significantly better performance at the airport
than would occur if carriers were to implement the schedules that they
originally proposed. The manner in which the FAA will allocate
operational authority to conduct scheduled operations after this Order
expires will be the subject of a rulemaking proceeding in a separate
docket. Carriers that wish to register an opinion regarding that
proposal should file their responsive written comments in the public
docket that the FAA will open for that proceeding.
Regarding the language in the proposed order that refers to a
future auction of new and returned capacity at EWR while this final
Order remains in effect, the FAA does not anticipate the immediate
availability of a significant volume of new or returned capacity at
EWR. However, the FAA expects that the need may arise to conduct an
auction of new or returned capacity at EWR or JFK before the end of
this calendar year. If this proves to be true, we anticipate that we
would allocate such capacity for a 5- to 10-year term. The FAA has
authority to lease real and personal property, including intangible
property, to others. 49 U.S.C. 106(l)(6) and 106(n). Because the
auction would address an FAA lease of Operating Authorizations awarded
by the FAA under its leasing authority rather than under an
administrative allocation, notice to the interested parties will be
governed by applicable procurement law, rather than by the
Administrative Procedure Act. The details regarding a potential auction
will be disclosed when the FAA is ready to proceed with an auction. In
accordance with the FAA's Acquisition Management System, the FAA will
publicly announce its intention to conduct an auction on a particular
date or over the course of a particular period of time. The FAA will
also announce its proposed auction procedures and solicit comments on
[[Page 29554]]
those procedures. The FAA will consider the comments that it receives
and then publish the final auction procedures. Any interested party
will have an avenue to protest the procedures up until the date of the
auction, in accordance with 49 U.S.C. 40110(d)(4) and 14 CFR Part 17.
The individual and non-airline organizational commenters express
nearly universal support for the proposed limit on scheduled operations
at EWR, primarily because they view it as an alternative to the delay
reduction anticipated from New York-New Jersey-Philadelphia airspace
redesign. The airspace redesign project to which they refer is an
initiative that is independent of this temporary limitation on flights
at EWR, and it will reduce congestion-related delay in that region over
the long term. The FAA will implement elements of the airspace redesign
over five years, and as a result, the full benefit of the redesign will
be realized in stages. By contrast, this Order will provide temporary
relief from the heightened delays that the region would experience as
early as this summer if carriers were permitted to operate the
schedules that they proposed. The FAA does not intend this Order to
serve as a long-term solution to congestion-related delay at and around
EWR.
Accordingly, with respect to scheduled flight operations at EWR, it
is ordered that:
1. This Order assigns operating authority to conduct an arrival or
a departure at EWR during the affected hours to the U.S. air carrier or
foreign air carrier identified in the appendix to this Order. The FAA
will not assign operating authority under this Order to any person or
entity other than a certificated U.S. or foreign air carrier with
appropriate economic authority and FAA operating authority under 14 CFR
Part 121, 129, or 135. This Order applies to the following:
a. All U.S. air carriers and foreign air carriers conducting
scheduled operations at EWR as of the date of this Order, any U.S. air
carrier or foreign air carrier that operates under the same designator
code as such a carrier, and any air carrier or foreign-flag carrier
that has or enters into a codeshare agreement with such a carrier.
b. All U.S. air carriers or foreign air carriers initiating
scheduled or regularly conducted commercial service to EWR while this
Order is in effect.
c. The Chief Counsel of the FAA, in consultation with the Vice
President, System Operations Services, is the final decision-maker for
determinations under this Order.
2. This Order governs scheduled arrivals and departures at EWR from
6 a.m. through 10:59 p.m., Eastern Time, Sunday through Saturday.
3. This Order takes effect at 6 a.m., Eastern Time, on June 20,
2008, and expires at 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on October 24, 2009.
4. Under the authority provided to the Secretary of Transportation
and the FAA Administrator by 49 U.S.C. 40101, 40103 and 40113, we
hereby order that:
a. No U.S. air carrier or foreign air carrier initiating or
conducting scheduled or regularly conducted commercial service at EWR
may conduct such operations without an Operating Authorization assigned
by the FAA.
b. Except as provided in the appendix to this Order, scheduled U.S.
air carrier and foreign air carrier arrivals and departures will not
exceed 81 per hour from 6 a.m. through 10:59 p.m., Eastern Time.
c. The Administrator may change the limits if he determines that
capacity exists to accommodate additional operations without a
significant increase in delays.
5. For administrative tracking purposes only, the FAA will assign
an identification number to each Operating Authorization.
6. A carrier holding an Operating Authorization may request the
Administrator's approval to move any arrival or departure scheduled
from 6 a.m. through 10:59 p.m. to another half hour within that period.
Except as provided in paragraph seven, the carrier must receive the
written approval of the Administrator, or his delegate, prior to
conducting any scheduled arrival or departure that is not listed in the
appendix to this Order. All requests to move an allocated Operating
Authorization must be submitted to the FAA Slot Administration Office,
facsimile (202) 267-7277 or e-mail 7-AWA-Slotadmin@faa.gov, and must
come from a designated representative of the carrier. If the FAA cannot
approve a carrier's request to move a scheduled arrival or departure,
the carrier may then apply for a trade in accordance with paragraph
seven.
7. A carrier may lease or trade an Operating Authorization to
another carrier for any consideration and for a period that does not
exceed the duration of this Order. A carrier may not lease an Operating
Authorization to another carrier unless it has actually used the
authorization to conduct flights to or from Newark at least 80% of the
time over the preceding 90-day period. The FAA may waive the 90-day
usage requirement of the Operating Authorization if the transferring
carrier can demonstrate that it has operated the flight that
corresponds to the Operating Authorization at least 80% of the time
over the 90 days preceding the proposed transfer of the Operating
Authorization. Notice of a trade or lease under this paragraph must be
submitted in writing to the FAA Slot Administration Office, facsimile
(202) 267-7277 or e-mail 7-AWA-Slotadmin@faa.gov, and must come from a
designated representative of each carrier. The FAA must confirm and
approve these transactions in writing prior to the effective date of
the transaction. The FAA will approve transfers between carriers under
the same marketing control up to five business days after the actual
operation, but only to accommodate operational disruptions that occur
on the same day of the scheduled operation.
8. A carrier may not buy, sell, trade, or transfer an Operating
Authorization, except as described in paragraph seven.
9. Historical rights to Operating Authorizations and withdrawal of
those rights due to insufficient usage will be determined on a seasonal
basis and in accordance with the schedule approved by the FAA prior to
the commencement of the applicable season.
a. For each day of the week that the FAA has approved an operating
schedule, any Operating Authorization not used at least 80% of the time
over the period authorized by the FAA under this paragraph will be
withdrawn by the FAA for the next applicable season except:
i. The FAA will treat as used any Operating Authorization held by a
carrier on Thanksgiving Day, the Friday following Thanksgiving Day, and
the period from December 24 through the first Saturday in January.
ii. The Administrator of the FAA may waive the 80% usage
requirement in the event of a highly unusual and unpredictable
condition which is beyond the control of the carrier and which affects
carrier operations for a period of five consecutive days or more.
b. Each carrier holding an Operating Authorization must forward in
writing to the FAA Slot Administration Office a list of all Operating
Authorizations held by the carrier and for each Operating
Authorization. These reports must include:
i. The dates within each applicable season on which it intends to
start and to cease scheduled operations.
A. For the Summer 2008 scheduling season, the report must be
received by the FAA no later than June 20, 2008.
B. For the Winter 2008/2009 scheduling season, the report must be
[[Page 29555]]
received by the FAA no later than August 15, 2008.
C. For the Summer 2009 scheduling season, the report must be
received by the FAA no later than January 15, 2009.
ii. The completed operations for each day of the applicable
scheduling season:
A. Via an interim report filed no later than September 1 for the
Summer scheduling season;
B. Via an interim report filed no later than January 15 for the
Winter scheduling season.
iii. A final report of the completed operations for each day of the
scheduling season within 30 days after the last day of the applicable
scheduling season.
10. In the event that a carrier surrenders to the FAA any Operating
Authorization assigned to it under this Order or if there are
unallocated Operating Authorizations, the FAA will determine whether
the unallocated Operating Authorizations should be reallocated. The FAA
may temporarily allocate an Operating Authorization if it determines
that such allocation will not increase congestion at the airport. Such
temporary allocations will not be entitled to historical status for the
next applicable scheduling season under paragraph 9.
11. If the FAA determines that a reduction in the number of
allocated Operating Authorizations is required to meet operational
needs, such as reduced airport capacity, the FAA will conduct a
weighted lottery to withdraw Operating Authorizations to meet a reduced
hourly or half-hourly limit for scheduled operations. The FAA will
provide at least 45 days' notice unless otherwise required by
operational needs. Any Operating Authorization that is withdrawn or
temporarily suspended will, if reallocated, be reallocated to the
carrier from which it was taken, provided that the carrier continues to
operate scheduled service at EWR.
12. The FAA will enforce this Order through an enforcement action
seeking a civil penalty under 49 U.S.C. 46301(a). A carrier that is not
a small business as defined in the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec.
632, will be liable for a civil penalty of up to $25,000 for every day
that it violates the limits set forth in this Order. A carrier that is
a small business as defined in the Small Business Act will be liable
for a civil penalty of up to $10,000 for every day that it violates the
limits set forth in this Order. The FAA also could file a civil action
in U.S. District Court, under 49 U.S.C. 46106, 46107, seeking to enjoin
any air carrier from violating the terms of this Order.
13. The FAA may modify or withdraw any provision in this Order on
its own or on application by any carrier for good cause shown.
Issued in Washington, DC, on May 15, 2008.
Robert A. Sturgell,
Acting Administrator, Federal Aviation Administration.
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[FR Doc. 08-1278 Filed 5-16-08; 12:00 pm]
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