United States, et al., v. US Airways Group, Inc., et al.; Public Comments and Response on Proposed Final Judgment, 14279-14294 [2014-05555]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 49 / Thursday, March 13, 2014 / Notices
and that it is in the interest of the public
and administrative economy to grant the
Motion. The Motion also requests that
the Commission limit service of the
confidential settlement documents to
the settling parties because the
disclosure of the documents will
prejudice Nokia’s ongoing discussions
with Google and its customers.
On February 12, 2014, Google stated
that it has no position on the Motion
because none of the patents upon which
it had intervened were currently before
the Commission.
The Commission finds that the
Motion complies with the Commission
Rules, and there is no evidence that the
proposed settlement will be contrary to
the public interest. The Commission
therefore determines to grant the
Motion, and to terminate the
investigation. The Commission also
finds that good cause exists to limit the
service of the confidential settlement
documents to the settling parties, and
grants the request to limit service of the
confidential settlement documents to
the settling parties.
The authority for the Commission’s
determination is contained in section
337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended (19 U.S.C. 1337), and in Part
210 of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice and Procedure (19 CFR part
210).
Issued: March 7, 2014.
By order of the Commission.
Lisa R. Barton,
Acting Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2014–05468 Filed 3–12–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7020–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Notice of Lodging Proposed Consent
Decree
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In accordance with Departmental
Policy, 28 CFR 50.7, notice is hereby
given that a proposed Consent Decree in
United States v. A. Derek Hoyte, et al.,
Case No. C10–2044BHS, was lodged
with the United States District Court for
the Western District of Washington on
February 28, 2014.
This proposed Consent Decree
concerns a complaint filed by the
United States against Defendants Derek
A. Hoyte, Columbia Pacific Enterprises,
Inc., and Columbia Crest Partners LLC,
in part pursuant to Section 309 of the
Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1319, to
obtain injunctive relief from and impose
civil penalties against the Defendants
for violating the Clean Water Act by
discharging pollutants without a permit
into waters of the United States. The
proposed Consent Decree resolves these
allegations by requiring the Defendants
to restore the impacted areas and to pay
a civil penalty.
The Department of Justice will accept
written comments relating to the Clean
Water Act aspects of this proposed
Consent Decree for thirty (30) days from
the date of publication of this Notice.
Please address comments to Brian C.
Kipnis, Assistant United States
Attorney, Office of the United States
Attorney for the Western District of
Washington, 5220 United States
Courthouse, 700 Stewart Street, Seattle,
Washington 98101 and refer to United
States v. Derek A. Hoyte, et al., Case No.
C10–2044BHS, U.S.A.O. #2010V00667.
The proposed Consent Decree may be
examined at the Clerk’s Office, United
States District Court for the Western
District of Washington in Seattle,
located at 700 Stewart Street, Suite
2310, Seattle, Washington 98101, or in
Tacoma, located at 1717 Pacific Avenue,
Room 3100, Tacoma, Washington
98402. In addition, the proposed
Consent Decree may be examined
electronically at https://www.justice.gov/
enrd/Consent_Decrees.html.
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Cherie L. Rogers,
Assistant Section Chief, Environmental
Defense Section, Environment and Natural
Resources Division.
RESPONSE OF PLAINTIFF UNITED
STATES TO PUBLIC COMMENTS ON
THE PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT
Antitrust Division
United States, et al., v. US Airways
Group, Inc., et al.; Public Comments
and Response on Proposed Final
Judgment
Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures
and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b)–(h),
the United States hereby publishes
below the Response of the United States
to Public Comments on the proposed
Final Judgment in United States, et al.,
v. US Airways Group, Inc., et al., Civil
Action No. 1:13–CV–1236–CKK (D.D.C.
2013).
Copies of the 14 Public Comments
and the Response of the United States
to Public Comments are available for
inspection at the Department of Justice
Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW.,
Suite 1010, Washington, DC 20530
(telephone: 202–514–2481); on the
Department of Justice’s Web site at
https://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/
usairways/; and at the Office
of the Clerk of the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia, 333
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20001. Copies of any of these
materials may also be obtained upon
request and payment of a copying fee.
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et al.
Plaintiffs, v. US AIRWAYS GROUP, INC. and
AMR CORPORATION DEFENDANTS.
Case No. 1:13–cv–1236 (CKK)
[FR Doc. 2014–05439 Filed 3–12–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................................................................................
I. Procedural History ................................................................................................................................................................................
II. The Complaint and the Proposed Settlement ....................................................................................................................................
A. The Complaint ..............................................................................................................................................................................
B. The Proposed Final Judgment ......................................................................................................................................................
1. Terms of the Proposed Final Judgment and Status of the Divestitures .............................................................................
2. Explanation of the Proposed Final Judgment ......................................................................................................................
a. Consumer Benefits from LCC Entry ...............................................................................................................................
b. The Importance of the Remedy Assets to Enhancing LCC Competition .....................................................................
III. Standard of Judicial Review ...............................................................................................................................................................
IV. Public Comments and the United States’ Response .........................................................................................................................
A. Any Challenge to the Merits of the Complaint Is Beyond the Scope of Tunney Act Review ................................................
B. The Proposed Settlement Will Counteract Competitive Harm From the Merger by Enhancing LCC Competition ...............
1. LCCs Provide Meaningful Competition ................................................................................................................................
2. The Remedy Adequately Addresses the Harms Alleged in the Complaint .......................................................................
C. The Remedy Does Not Mandate Changes in Service Patterns at Reagan National ..................................................................
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1. Background on Slot Regulation at Reagan National ............................................................................................................
2. Nothing in the Remedy Requires New American to Discontinue Service to Particular Airports ....................................
3. Mandating Service on Any Particular Route Is Unwarranted .............................................................................................
D. Delta Is Not an Appropriate Divestiture Candidate ...................................................................................................................
E. Additional Concerns Raised by Commenters ..............................................................................................................................
1. Airline Consumer Disclosure and Alliance Issues Are Outside the Scope of This Action ..............................................
2. The Proposed Final Judgment Precludes New American from Reacquiring the Divested Gates at LAX; No Modification of the Decree Is Necessary ..............................................................................................................................................
3. The CIS Fully Complies with Tunney Act Requirements ...................................................................................................
4. The Remedy Is Not the Result of Political Pressure ............................................................................................................
5. Closing of the Merger Prior to Entry of the Final Judgment Is Consistent with Tunney Act Requirements ...................
CONCLUSION ...........................................................................................................................................................................................
INTRODUCTION
Pursuant to the requirements of the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,
15 U.S.C. § 16(b)–(h) (‘‘APPA’’ or
‘‘Tunney Act’’), the United States
hereby files the public comments
concerning the proposed Final
Judgment in this case and the United
States’ response to these comments. For
the reasons discussed below, the United
States continues to believe that the
remedy it obtained from Defendants will
address the competitive harm alleged in
this action and is plainly in the public
interest. Accordingly, the United States
proposes no modifications to the
proposed Final Judgment.
The remedy is a major victory for
American consumers. It will enable Low
Cost Carriers (‘‘LCCs’’) to fly millions of
new passengers per year to destinations
throughout the country. It fully
addresses the harm that would have
resulted from New American’s control
of nearly 70% of the limited takeoff and
landing slots at Ronald Reagan
Washington National Airport (‘‘Reagan
National’’). It enables LCCs to acquire
otherwise unobtainable slots and gates
at Reagan National (Southwest Airlines,
JetBlue Airways and Virgin America)
and LaGuardia Airport (Southwest and
Virgin America), and to obtain gates at
other busy airports around the country
such as Los Angeles International
Airport, Chicago O’Hare International
Airport, and Dallas Love Field. And by
introducing new low-cost capacity and
service on numerous routes around the
country, it enhances the ability of LCCs
to thwart industry coordination among
the legacy carriers. The competitive
significance of the remedy is reflected in
the value being paid for the divested
Reagan National and LaGuardia slots—
over $425 million—which is
unprecedented in the airline industry
and among the most substantial merger
remedies in any industry.
The United States has received a total
of fourteen comments reflecting
divergent views.1 One suggests that the
1 In addition, fifteen individuals sent emails
about competition concerns relating to the
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lawsuit should not have been filed in
the first place. Others assert that the
settlement does not go far enough to
remedy potential harm from the merger,
and many raise issues that are outside
the scope of an antitrust review. After
careful consideration of these
comments, the United States has
concluded that nothing in them casts
doubt on the very substantial public
interest that will be achieved by the
proposed remedy.
The United States has published the
comments and this response on the
Antitrust Division Web site and is
submitting to the Federal Register this
response and the Web site address at
which the comments may be viewed
and downloaded, as set forth in the
Court’s Orders dated November 20, 2013
(Docket No. 154) and February 27, 2014
(Docket No. 158).2 Following Federal
Register publication, the United States
will move the Court, pursuant to 15
U.S.C. § 16(b)–(h), to enter the proposed
Final Judgment.
I. Procedural History
On August 13, 2013, the United
States, joined by several states and the
District of Columbia (‘‘Plaintiff States’’),
filed a Complaint in this matter alleging
that the proposed merger of US Airways
Group, Inc. (‘‘US Airways’’) and AMR
Corporation, the parent of American
Airlines, Inc., (‘‘American’’), creating
New American, would violate Section 7
of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18.
In the three months following the
filing of the Complaint, Plaintiffs and
Defendants actively prepared for trial
and accomplished a substantial amount
settlement to the United States using various
channels outside of the designated procedures for
submitting Tunney Act comments. The United
States has reviewed all of these emails and none of
them raise any issue not already addressed in this
Response to Comments. Although these emails are
not formal Tunney Act comments, we are
nevertheless publishing them in this case but
redacting all identifying information about the
authors. If the Court requests, the United States will
provide unredacted copies under seal.
2 This Response and all of the public comments
may be found on the Antitrust Division’s Web site
at https://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/usairways/
index.html.
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of pre-trial groundwork, including
completion of fact discovery. Trial in
this matter was scheduled to begin on
November 25, 2013.
While the parties continued to
litigate, they engaged in settlement
discussions that culminated in a
consensual resolution of the matter. On
November 12, 2013, the United States
filed the proposed Final Judgment
(Docket No. 147–2), a Competitive
Impact Statement (‘‘CIS,’’ Docket No.
148), and an Asset Preservation Order
and Stipulation signed by the parties
consenting to entry of the proposed
Final Judgment after compliance with
the requirements of the APPA (Docket
No. 147–1).
As Defendant AMR Corporation was
in bankruptcy, the settlement required
approval by the bankruptcy court. On
November 27, 2013, the United States
Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
District of New York entered an order
finding that the settlement satisfied the
requirements for approval under the
Bankruptcy Code, granted AMR’s
motion to consummate the merger, and
denied a request for a temporary
restraining order filed by a private
plaintiff seeking to enjoin the merger on
antitrust grounds.3 AMR exited
bankruptcy protection, and the merger
closed on December 9, 2013. The
Bankruptcy Court has retained
jurisdiction to continue to hear the
private case.4
Pursuant to the APPA and this Court’s
November 20, 2013 Order, the United
States published the proposed Final
Judgment and CIS in the Federal
Register on November 27, 2013, see 78
Fed. Reg. 71377, and caused summaries
3 See Order Pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 9019(a)
Approving Settlement Between Debtors, US
Airways, Inc., and United States Department of
Justice, In re AMR Corp., (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2013),
ECF No. 11321, available at https://
www.amrcaseinfo.com/pdflib/11321_15463.pdf,
and accompanying Memorandum, available at
https://www.amrcaseinfo.com/pdflib/72_01392.pdf.
4 Fjord v. AMR Corp., (In re AMR Corp.) Adv. Pr.
No. 13–01392 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.), docket available at
https://www.amrcaseinfo.com/adversary_01392.php.
(The lead attorney in the private case, Joseph
Alioto, submitted a Tunney Act comment in this
proceeding.)
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of the terms of the proposed Final
Judgment and CIS, together with
directions for submission of written
comments relating to the proposed Final
Judgment, to be published in the
Washington Post, Dallas Morning News,
and Arizona Republic for seven days,
beginning on November 25, 2013 and
ending on December 9, 2013.
Defendants filed the statements required
by 15 U.S.C. § 16(g) on December 9,
2013. The 60-day public comment
period ended on February 7, 2014. The
United States received fourteen
comments, as described below and
attached hereto.
II. The Complaint and the Proposed
Settlement
A. The Complaint
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The Complaint alleged that the likely
effect of the merger of US Airways and
American, which would reduce the
number of major domestic airlines from
five to four and the number of ‘‘legacy
airlines’’ 5 from four to three, would be
to lessen competition substantially in
the sale of scheduled air passenger
service in city pair markets throughout
the United States, and in the market for
takeoff and landing authorizations
(‘‘slots’’) at Reagan National.6
One of the United States’ concerns
was that the merger would make it
easier for the remaining legacy
carriers—New American, United and
Delta—to cooperate, rather than
compete, on price and service.
Amended Complaint (‘‘Am. Compl.,’’
Docket No. 73) ¶¶ 41–81. Such
coordinated conduct deprives
consumers of the benefits of full and
vigorous competition.7
As explained in the Complaint, the
structure of the airline industry was
already conducive to coordinated
behavior among the legacy carriers. Id.,
¶¶ 41–47. For example, on routes where
one legacy carrier offers nonstop
service, the other legacies generally
‘‘respect’’ (a term used by American) the
nonstop carrier’s pricing by pricing their
connecting service at the same level as
5 ‘‘Legacy airlines,’’ as used herein, refers to the
carriers that have operated interstate service since
before deregulation and rely on nationwide huband-spoke networks.
6 Four of the busiest airports in the United
States—including Reagan National and LaGuardia—
are subject to slot limitations governed by the FAA.
The lack of availability of slots is a substantial
barrier to entry at those airports, especially for
LCCs. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 84–86.
7 The potential for mergers to increase the
likelihood of such coordinated interaction among
competitors is a central focus of the DOJ’s merger
review. See U.S. Dep’t of Justice & Fed. Trade
Comm’n, Horizontal Merger Guidelines § 7 (Aug.
19, 2010), available at https://www.justice.gov/atr/
public/guidelines/hmg-2010.html.
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the nonstop carrier—notwithstanding
the service disadvantages associated
with connecting service. US Airways,
however, differed from the other legacy
carriers in that on some routes it offered
its ‘‘Advantage Fares’’ program under
which it provided discounts for
connecting service compared to other
carriers’ nonstop fares, particularly for
last-minute travelers. The structure of
the New American network reduced its
incentives to continue the Advantage
Fare program. Id., ¶¶ 48–58.
In addition to the risk of harm from
the likely elimination of the Advantage
Fares program, the Complaint alleged
that the merger would likely enhance
coordinated interaction among the
legacy carriers with respect to capacity
reductions, id., ¶¶ 59–70, and ancillary
fees, id., ¶¶ 71–81. It also alleged
potential anticompetitive effects
resulting from the dominance of the
merged airline at Reagan National,
where it would control 69 percent of the
take-off and landing slots, id., ¶¶ 83–90,
and from the elimination of head-tohead competition between US Airways
and American on numerous nonstop
and connecting routes, id., ¶¶ 38 & 82.
The Complaint also alleged that if the
merger went through, the other
established legacy carriers—Delta and
United—would be unlikely to undercut
anticompetitive price increases or
expand in response to capacity
reductions by the merged airline as
‘‘those carriers are likely to benefit from
and participate in such conduct by
coordinating with the merged firm.’’ Id.,
¶ 92. LCCs, such as Southwest, JetBlue,
Virgin America, and Spirit Airlines, on
the other hand, offer ‘‘important
competition on routes they fly,’’ but
have less extensive networks and face
barriers to expansion such as a lack of
access to slots and gate facilities
necessary to serve constrained airports.
Id., ¶¶ 3 & 91, 93. For example,
although Southwest carries the most
domestic passengers of any airline, its
network is limited compared to the
legacy carriers with respect to the
significant business-oriented routes
served from Reagan National and
LaGuardia.8
8 See, e.g., Motion for Leave to File Amicus
Curiae Brief by Southwest Airlines Co. (Nov. 7,
2013, Docket No. 142) at 3 (‘‘The pro-competitive
effect of Southwest’s entry and service is effective,
however, only when Southwest has the ability to
enter a particular market. While Southwest serves
over 90 destinations in the United States, it has
extremely limited access to Reagan National . . .
and LaGuardia . . . due to severe entry restrictions.
Service to those airports is significantly limited by
the allocation of take-off and landing slots, and
Southwest has been able to obtain only a very small
number of slots at those two airports.’’).
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B. The Proposed Final Judgment
1. Terms of the Proposed Final
Judgment and Status of the Divestitures
As set forth in the proposed Final
Judgment, Defendants are required to
divest or transfer to purchasers
approved by the United States, in
consultation with the Plaintiff States:
• 104 air carrier slots at Reagan
National (i.e., all of American’s premerger air carrier slots) and associated
gates and other ground facilities; 9
• 34 slots at New York LaGuardia
International Airport (‘‘LaGuardia’’) and
associated gates and other ground
facilities; and
• rights to and interests in two airport
gates and associated ground facilities at
each of the following airports: Chicago
O’Hare International Airport (‘‘ORD’’),
Los Angeles International Airport
(‘‘LAX’’), Boston Logan International
Airport (‘‘BOS’’), Miami International
Airport (‘‘MIA’’), and Dallas Love Field
(‘‘DAL’’).
Defendants have completed the
divestiture of the 34 LaGuardia slots by
(1) selling the 10 slots to Southwest that
American had been leasing to
Southwest (see PFJ, § IV.G.1), (2) selling
an additional bundle of 12 slots to
Southwest, and (3) selling a bundle of
12 slots to Virgin America. Defendants
are in the process of completing the
divestiture of the 104 Reagan National
slots. They have divested the 16 slots to
JetBlue that American previously had
been leasing to JetBlue (see PFJ, § IV.F.1)
and have sold an additional 24 slots to
JetBlue. Defendants have agreed to
divest 56 slots to Southwest 10 and eight
slots to Virgin America. The parties
expect to close the Southwest and
Virgin America transactions on March
10, 2014 or soon thereafter. The United
States, in consultation with the Plaintiff
States, approved the LaGuardia and
Reagan National divestitures. The
acquirers will begin operating the slots
later this year. The process for the
divestiture of the gates at the remaining
airports is expected to occur in the near
future.
In addition to the relief provided by
the proposed Final Judgment,
9 Slots at Reagan National are designated as either
‘‘air carrier,’’ which may be operated with any size
aircraft that meets the operational requirements of
the airport, or ‘‘commuter,’’ which must be operated
using aircraft with 76 seats or fewer.
10 Of the 104 air carrier slots being divested, 102
are for daily service and the remaining two are
allocated for Sunday-only service. Southwest is
purchasing the bundles of slots containing the two
‘‘Sunday-only’’ slots. The United States
understands that Southwest has declined these
‘‘Sunday only’’ slots and that they will be returned
to the Federal Aviation Administration for
reallocation in consultation with the Department of
Justice.
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Defendants reached an agreement with
the Plaintiff States to maintain service
from at least one of New American’s
hubs to specified airports in the Plaintiff
States for a period of five years,
Supplemental Stipulated Order (Docket
No. 151), and an agreement with the
United States Department of
Transportation (‘‘DOT’’) to use all of its
commuter slots at Reagan National to
serve airports designated as medium,
small and non-hub airports (i.e., airports
accounting for less than one percent of
annual passenger boardings) for a period
of at least five years.11
2. Explanation of the Proposed Final
Judgment
The proposed Final Judgment
effectively addresses the harm to
competition that was likely to result
from the merger. The LCCs that acquire
the assets will establish stronger
positions at strategically important
destinations—including top business
markets—where it has been particularly
difficult to obtain access. These assets
will provide them with the incentive to
invest in new capacity and position
them to offer more meaningful
competition system-wide, forcing legacy
carriers to respond to that increased
competition. And, by increasing the
scope of the LCCs’ networks, the
divestitures will bring the consumerfriendly policies of the LCCs to more
travelers across the country. For
example, neither Southwest nor JetBlue
currently charges customers a first bag
fee while all of the legacy carriers
charge $25 per bag.
Strengthened by increased access to
capacity-constrained airports, the LCCs
will be able to fly more people to more
places at more competitive fares. In this
way, although the proposed remedy will
not create a new independent airline or
guarantee the continued existence of
Advantage Fares on all routes, it will
impede the industry’s evolution toward
a tighter oligopoly and deliver benefits
to millions of consumers that could not
be obtained even by enjoining the
merger.
a. Consumer Benefits from LCC Entry
The consumer benefits that flow from
LCC entry are well established. Previous
work by the Department of Justice has
shown that the presence of an LCC on
a nonstop route results in both
significant price reductions and
capacity increases.12 An extensive body
of economic research confirms that LCC
entry on a route—whether by nonstop or
connecting service—reduces fares three
times as much as the addition of a
legacy competitor.13
These substantial consumer benefits
have proved particularly meaningful
when LCCs are able to gain access to
slot-constrained airports. For example,
in 2010, Southwest acquired 36 slots at
Newark Liberty International Airport
pursuant to a divestiture remedy that
addressed competition concerns arising
from the merger of United Airlines and
Continental Airlines. Southwest used
those slots to enter six nonstop routes
from Newark (one of which, NewarkBWI, it later exited), resulting in
substantially lower fares to consumers
and increased output:
Year-over-year percentage change in average
fare
Route
Year-over-year percentage change in number
of passengers
¥27
¥15
¥14
¥11
¥5
66
53
57
35
49
Newark-St. Louis .....................................................................................................................
Newark-Houston ......................................................................................................................
Newark-Phoenix .......................................................................................................................
Newark-Chicago ......................................................................................................................
Newark-Denver ........................................................................................................................
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Passengers flying on these five
nonstop routes after Southwest began
service saved about $75 million
annually compared to what they would
have had to pay prior to Southwest’s
entry.14 In addition, Southwest was able
to incorporate Newark service into its
overall domestic network, offering low
fares on connections to Newark from
over sixty cities.15 In this way, the
creation of only a few nonstop routes
led to 60 connecting routes. A similar
multiplier effect is expected with the
current divestitures.
Likewise, JetBlue used its limited
number of slots at Reagan National to
drive down fares and increase output on
the routes it serves. For example, after
JetBlue entered the Reagan National to
Boston route in 2010, average fares
dropped by 39 percent year-over-year
and passengers nearly doubled. US
Airways estimated that after JetBlue’s
entry, the last-minute fare for round-trip
travel between Reagan National and
Boston—a key business route—dropped
by over $700. See Am. Compl. ¶ 88.
11 The DOT agreement is available at https://
www.dot.gov/airconsumer/merger-usairwaysamrcorp. The European Commission also reviewed
the merger. British Airways, which has been given
antitrust immunity with American for the oneworld
alliance, and US Airways are the only two nonstop
competitors in the Philadelphia-London Heathrow
market (‘‘PHL–LHR’’). The European Commission
cleared the merger after the parties made
commitments to divest a slot pair at slotconstrained London Heathrow Airport and to offer
supportive interline and frequent flyer agreements
to an entrant into the PHL–LHR market. See Press
Release, European Commission, ‘‘Mergers:
Commission approves proposed merger between US
Airways and American Airlines’ holding company
AMR Corporation, subject to conditions’’ (Aug. 5,
2013), available at https://europa.eu/rapid/pressrelease_IP-13-764_en.htm.
12 Comments of the U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Notice
of Petition for Waiver of the Terms of the Order
Limiting Scheduled Operations at LaGuardia
Airport, Fed’l Aviation Admin., FAA–2010–0109,
March 24, 2010 at A–2 (finding an ‘‘economically
significant impact from the presence of an LCC on
nonstop route-level prices, ranging from 21% to
27% average price decreases and a 68% to 118%
median increase in number of passengers
depending on the data examined’’).
13 E.g., Jan K. Brueckner et al., Airline
Competition and Domestic U.S. Airfares: A
Comprehensive Reappraisal, 2 Econ. Transp. 1–17
(2013) (finding that addition of nonstop LCC service
reduces fares by 12% to 33% while entry of
nonstop legacy service reduces fares by
approximately 4%; similarly, the presence of LCC
connecting service lowers fares by as much as 12%,
while additional legacy connecting service lowers
fares by typically less than 3%); Phillippe Alepin
et al., Segmented Competition in Airlines: The
Changing Roles of Low-Cost and Legacy Carriers in
Fare Determination, (working paper), available at
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_
id=2212860 (finding that the addition of nonstop
LCC service on a route reduces fares by
approximately 24% and the addition of a second
nonstop LCC further reduces fares by approximately
13%); see also Martin Dresner et al., The Impact of
Low Cost Carriers on Airport and Route
Competition, 30 J. of Transp. Econ. & Pol’y 309–328
(1996); Steven A. Morrison, Actual, Adjacent, and
Potential Competition: Estimating the Full Effect of
Southwest Airlines, 35 J. of Transp. Econ. & Pol’y
239–256 (2001).
14 USDOT Origin & Destination Survey.
Percentage changes in average fare and number of
passengers are calculated using data from the first
full quarter after entry by Southwest and, as a
baseline, data from four quarters before that entry.
To determine annual consumer savings, the number
of passengers flying on each route for each of the
four quarters following Southwest’s entry is
multiplied by the dollar amount of the
corresponding year-to-year fare change for that
quarter. The annual amount is the sum of the four
quarters for all of the routes. Data is not reported
for the Newark-BWI route.
15 USDOT Origin & Destination Survey, CY 2012.
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b. The Importance of the Remedy
Assets to Enhancing LCC Competition
The proposed settlement significantly
eases some of the most intractable
barriers to LCC entry and expansion
throughout the country. First and
foremost, the remedy provides
unprecedented access to Reagan
National and LaGuardia, two of the most
strategically important—and most
constrained—airports highly preferred
by business passengers. The legacy
carriers have long dominated these
airports and meaningful entry by LCCs
has been notoriously difficult. At
Reagan National, where LCCs had only
about six percent of the take-offs and
landings prior to the divestitures, the
remedy transfers twelve percent of the
slots to LCCs, nearly tripling LCC
presence there. Likewise, the remedy
will extend access at LaGuardia, where
LCCs hold less than 10 percent of the
slots. The LCCs that are acquiring the
divested slots will be able to offer
through their use of the divested slots
over four million seats per year at
Reagan National and over 1.5 million
seats per year at LaGuardia.16
Indeed, the transfer of Reagan
National slots to LCCs will produce an
immediate benefit to consumers in the
form of increased capacity because LCCs
are likely to use larger planes than US
Airways had used.17 Comparing the
average aircraft size operated by US
Airways on routes it has announced it
will exit with the average aircraft size
operated by Southwest and JetBlue at
Reagan National in 2013, the number of
seats at Reagan National is estimated to
increase by over 2 million per year as
a direct result of transferring the slots to
LCCs, leading to a potential 10%
increase in the number of passengers
using the airport.18
And, for the first time ever, an LCC
(Southwest) will be able to offer a wide
16 Annual seats calculations are based on the
number of divested daily slots at each airport and
the average number of seats on the aircraft that the
slot acquirers typically use.
17 A large proportion of US Airways’ Reagan
National flights have in recent years been on small
regional jets, even though it had sufficient
flexibility with its slot portfolio to use larger
aircraft. Absent the remedy, the merged airline
would have had two-thirds of the flights at Reagan
National but only half the airport’s passengers.
Hearing on Airline Industry Consolidation Before
the Subcomm. on Aviation Operations, Saftey and
Security of the S Comm. on Commerce, Science and
Transportation (June 19, 2013) 113 Cong. (statement
of W. Douglas Parker, Chairman and CEO, US
Airways Group).
18 The average aircraft US Airways operated in
2013 on the 16 routes that it plans to exit had 57.6
seats; Southwest and JetBlue operate aircraft with
an average of 123.1 seats. Official Airline Guide.
(The aircraft size on US Airways’s current Reagan
National-San Diego service is excluded because that
service will simply shift to Reagan National-LAX.)
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array of flight options for nonstop and
connecting service from Reagan
National to points throughout its
network, with resulting consumer
benefits that, given the large number of
slots at issue, are likely to significantly
exceed those that occurred after its entry
at Newark. Although Southwest has not
yet announced which cities it will serve
with the 56 slots it purchased through
the divestitures, it will likely have the
flexibility to add as many as six to eight
new routes to its existing seven Reagan
National routes.19 The addition of each
new route will create new connecting
service to many more points throughout
the country.20
Given that New American’s slot
holdings at Reagan National will allow
it to continue to serve an extensive list
of destinations, nearly anywhere
Southwest, JetBlue or Virgin America
choose to fly with their newly-acquired
slots will provide direct competition
with New American.21 The remedy also
has ensured that JetBlue will retain
permanent access to the sixteen slots it
formerly leased from American. JetBlue
uses these slots to serve routes on which
it competes directly with US Airways
(and now New American). One of the
harms alleged from the merger was the
likelihood that New American would
have cancelled the lease to eliminate
that competition.22
Similarly, gate divestitures at O’Hare,
Los Angeles (LAX), Boston, Dallas Love
Field, and Miami will expand the
presence of LCCs at these strategically
important airports located throughout
the country. The acquirers will be able
to offer increased competition not just
on nonstop flights to and from these key
airports, but also on connecting flights
nationwide. O’Hare and LAX, two of
New American’s major hubs, are among
the most highly congested airports in
the country, and competitors have
historically had difficulties obtaining
access to gates and other facilities at
those airports.23 Dallas Love Field is
much closer to downtown Dallas than
American’s largest hub at Dallas-Fort
Worth International Airport (‘‘DFW’’).
Gates at DFW are readily available, but
Love Field is gate constrained. Although
today’s operations at Love Field are
severely restricted under current law,24
those restrictions are due to expire in
October 2014, at which point Love Field
will have a distinct advantage over DFW
in serving business customers near
downtown Dallas. The divestitures will
position the acquirer to provide
vigorous competition to New
American’s nonstop and connecting
service out of DFW. And as there is
limited ability to enter or expand at
Boston, the divestitures will provide
relief there too.25
Importantly, the consumer benefits of
opening access to these key constrained
airports will extend beyond the
passengers directly served at those
seven airports. Given the importance of
the airports to business travelers, the
LCCs that are acquiring the slots and
gates will have a more robust product
for business and corporate travel. For
example, as a result of the divestitures,
Virgin America—one of only a few
airlines to start domestic service in
recent years—will enter LaGuardia,
expand at Reagan National, and may
expand at other constrained airports as
the gate divestitures progress. As such,
it will supplement its West Coast
presence with service to major East
Coast business destinations (and
potentially additional destinations
around the country), thereby
establishing greater scope and scale.26
19 Carriers typically schedule between three (in
small markets) and 10 (in large markets) daily
round trips when establishing a new route.
20 If Southwest were to institute nonstop service
between Reagan National and, for example,
Chicago’s Midway Airport (Southwest’s top airport
in terms of departures), it would simultaneously
create convenient one-stop service between Reagan
National and over 55 additional airports that
Southwest serves from Midway.
21 For example, JetBlue has announced that it will
add three additional routes with twelve of the
twenty-four new Reagan National slots it has
acquired. Two (Charleston, SC and Hartford, CT)
will add a competitor to routes that would
otherwise only be served by New American from
Reagan National, and the other (Nassau, Bahamas)
will add LCC service on a route New American has
announced it will exit. See Press Release, JetBlue,
‘‘JetBlue Adds Three Nonstop Destinations for
Customers at Ronald Reagan Washington National
Airport, Offers Introductory One-Way Fares as Low
as $30’’ (Mar. 6, 2014), available at https://
investor.jetblue.com/
phoenix.zhtml?c=131045&p=irol-NewsArticle.
22 See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 87–88.
23 For example, Virgin America originally
announced its intent to serve O’Hare in 2008, but
its plans were delayed over three years due to a lack
of gate availability. Press Release, Virgin America,
‘‘Virgin America Breezes Into O’Hare’’ (Feb. 17,
2011) (describing long-term efforts to obtain gate
access), available at https://www.virginamerica.com/
press-release/2011/virgin-america-breezes-intochicago-ohare.html. The comments submitted by
Allegiant Airlines demonstrate the importance to
LCCs of obtaining gates at LAX.
24 Under legislation known as the Wright
Amendment, airlines operating out of Love Field
may not operate nonstop service on aircraft with
more than 56 seats to any points beyond Texas,
New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri or Alabama.
25 Although access issues at Miami are not as
acute as at the other airports, the proposed Final
Judgment also ensures that a carrier seeking to enter
or expand at Miami will have access to two of the
gates and associated ground facilities currently
leased by US Airways.
26 Virgin America has announced its interest in
beginning service from Love Field to major business
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Moreover, the passenger demand
generated in cities where the
divestitures will occur will enhance the
LCCs’ incentives to invest in new
capacity elsewhere. For example, if
Southwest were to add nonstop service
from Reagan National to Nashville, the
new source of passengers from the major
population center of Washington, DC,
could support entry or expansion on
additional routes out of Nashville. At
the same time, Southwest’s marketing
position in Nashville would be
enhanced because the nation’s capital is
included in the service offerings
available in Nashville.27 That would in
turn make it easier for Southwest to
attract passengers to its other
destinations and incentivize Southwest
to add capacity to meet that demand.
Thus, taken together, the divestitures
will substantially improve the LCCs’
network quality and attractiveness to
customers, position them to offer more
meaningful competition system-wide,
and enable them to grow faster than
they otherwise would, both in the depth
and breadth of their networks.28
III. Standard of Judicial Review
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The APPA requires that proposed
consent judgments in antitrust cases
brought by the United States be subject
to a sixty-day public comment period,
after which the court shall determine
whether entry of the proposed Final
Judgment ‘‘is in the public interest.’’ 15
U.S.C. § 16(e)(1). In making that
determination, the court, in accordance
with the statute as amended in 2004, is
required to consider:
(A) the competitive impact of such
judgment, including termination of
alleged violations, provisions for
enforcement and modification, duration
of relief sought, anticipated effects of
alternative remedies actually
destinations throughout the country. Press Release,
Virgin America, ‘‘Virgin America Plans Dallas
Expansion: Airline wants to bring more businessfriendly, low-fare flight competition to Dallas with
new flights from Love Field,’’ available at https://
www.virginamerica.com/press-release/2014/virginamerica-plans-dallas-expansion.html.
27 As Southwest’s CEO stated, ‘‘We have a lot of
customers that love Southwest Airlines . . . and a
lot of them want to go to Reagan.’’ Charisse Jones,
‘‘JetBlue, Southwest Gain Slots at Reagan Airport,’’
USA Today (Jan. 30, 2014), available at https://
usat.ly/1b9U3ah.
28 We are not suggesting that this remedy
eliminates all entry barriers faced by LCCs. As
alleged in the Complaint, airlines (including LCCs)
face entry impediments, particularly where the
origin or destination airport is another airline’s hub.
Am. Compl. ¶ 91. However, LCCs have
demonstrated some ability to overcome those
disadvantages with the help of lower costs, and we
expect that the network-wide strengthening brought
about by the divestitures will, over time, help the
LCCs overcome some of the other obstacles that
limit their ability to expand.
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considered, whether its terms are
ambiguous, and any other competitive
considerations bearing upon the
adequacy of such judgment that the
court deems necessary to a
determination of whether the consent
judgment is in the public interest; and
(B) the impact of entry of such
judgment upon competition in the
relevant market or markets, upon the
public generally and individuals
alleging specific injury from the
violations set forth in the complaint
including consideration of the public
benefit, if any, to be derived from a
determination of the issues at trial.
15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(1). In considering these
statutory factors, the court’s inquiry is
necessarily a limited one as the
government is entitled to ‘‘broad
discretion to settle with the defendant
within the reaches of the public
interest.’’ United States v. Microsoft
Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461 (D.C. Cir.
1995); see also United States v. SBC
Commc’ns, Inc., 489 F. Supp. 2d 1
(D.D.C. 2007) (assessing public interest
standard under the Tunney Act); United
States v. InBev N.V./S.A., 2009–2 Trade
Cas. (CCH) ¶ 76,736, 2009 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 84787, No. 08–1965 (JR) at *3
(D.D.C. Aug. 11, 2009) (discussing
nature of review of consent judgment
under the Tunney Act; inquiry is
limited to ‘‘whether the government’s
determination that the proposed
remedies will cure the antitrust
violations alleged in the complaint was
reasonable, and whether the
mechanisms to enforce the final
judgment are clear and manageable’’).
Under the APPA a court considers,
among other things, the relationship
between the remedy secured and the
specific allegations set forth in the
Complaint, whether the decree is
sufficiently clear, whether the
enforcement mechanisms are sufficient,
and whether the decree may positively
harm third parties. See Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1458–62. With respect to the
adequacy of the relief secured by the
decree, a court may not ‘‘engage in an
unrestricted evaluation of what relief
would best serve the public.’’ United
States v. BNS, Inc., 858 F.2d 456, 462
(9th Cir. 1988) (citing United States v.
Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th
Cir. 1981)). Instead,
[t]he balancing of competing social
and political interests affected by a
proposed antitrust consent decree must
be left, in the first instance, to the
discretion of the Attorney General. The
court’s role in protecting the public
interest is one of insuring that the
government has not breached its duty to
the public in consenting to the decree.
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The court is required to determine not
whether a particular decree is the one
that will best serve society, but whether
the settlement in ‘‘within the reaches of
the public interest.’’ More elaborate
requirements might undermine the
effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by
consent decree.
Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis
added) (citations omitted).
In determining whether a proposed
settlement is in the public interest, the
government is entitled to deference as to
its ‘‘predictions as to the effect of the
proposed remedies.’’ Microsoft, 56 F.3d
at 1461; see also SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 17 (explaining that district
court ‘‘must accord deference to the
government’s predictions about the
efficacy of its remedies’’); United States
v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., 272 F.
Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003) (noting that
the court should grant due respect to the
United States’ ‘‘prediction as to the
effect of the proposed remedies, its
perception of the market structure, and
its views of the nature of the case’’);
United States v. Morgan Stanley, 881 F.
Supp. 2d 563, 567 (S.D.N.Y. 2012)
(government entitled to deference).
Courts ‘‘may not require that the
remedies perfectly match the alleged
violations.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 17. Rather, the ultimate
question is whether ‘‘the remedies
[obtained in the decree are] so
inconsonant with the allegations
charged as to fall outside of the ‘reaches
of the public interest.’ ’’ Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1461. Accordingly, the United
States ‘‘need only provide a factual basis
for concluding that the settlements are
reasonably adequate remedies for the
alleged harms.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 17. And, a ‘‘proposed decree
must be approved even if it falls short
of the remedy the court would impose
on its own, as long as it falls within the
range of acceptability or is within the
reaches of the public interest.’’ United
States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F.
Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982) (citations
and internal quotations omitted); see
also United States v. Alcan Aluminum
Ltd., 605 F. Supp. 619, 622 (W.D. Ky.
1985) (approving the consent decree
even though the court would have
imposed a greater remedy).
In its 2004 amendments to the
Tunney Act,29 Congress made clear its
29 The 2004 amendments substituted ‘‘shall’’ for
‘‘may’’ in directing relevant factors for courts to
consider and amended the list of factors to focus on
competitive considerations and to address
potentially ambiguous judgment terms. Compare 15
U.S.C. § 16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(1)
(2006); see also SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at
11 (concluding that the 2004 amendments ‘‘effected
minimal changes’’ to Tunney Act review).
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intent to preserve the practical benefits
of using consent decrees in antitrust
enforcement, adding the unambiguous
instruction that ‘‘[n]othing in this
section shall be construed to require the
court to conduct an evidentiary hearing
or to require the court to permit anyone
to intervene.’’ 15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(2). The
procedure for the public-interest
determination is left to the discretion of
the court, with the recognition that the
court’s ‘‘scope of review remains
sharply proscribed by precedent and the
nature of the Tunney Act proceedings.’’
SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11;
see also United States v. Enova Corp.,
107 F. Supp. 2d 10, 17 (D.D.C. 2000)
(‘‘[T]he Tunney Act expressly allows the
court to make its public interest
determination on the basis of the
competitive impact statement and
response to public comments alone.’’).
IV. Public Comments and the United
States’ Response
The United States received fourteen
public comments.30 The comments have
been posted on the Web site of the
Antitrust Division pursuant to the
Court’s November 20, 2013 Order. The
comments are summarized below:
• Delta Air Lines filed comments that
argue that the Complaint
mischaracterizes airline competition
and overstates the potential harm from
the merger. Delta asserts that the legacy
airlines do not engage in oligopolistic
pricing; instead, according to Delta, they
compete vigorously with one another.
Delta also argues that divestiture of
Reagan National slots exclusively to
LCCs would be harmful to consumers
because LCCs would serve large, leisureoriented markets instead of the smalland medium-sized communities that
Delta states it would be more likely to
serve. Thus, Delta argues that it should
not be precluded from acquiring Reagan
National divestiture slots. Delta also
makes similar arguments with respect to
the two American gates at Dallas Love
Field, where Delta currently operates
limited service by sub-leasing one of
American’s gates. It claims that
divesting those gates to an LCC would
harm Dallas-area passengers by
depriving them of Delta’s network
service.
• Senator John D. Rockefeller IV,
Senator John Thune, Congressman Bill
Shuster, and Congressman Nick J.
Rahall II submitted a joint letter
expressing their concerns that ‘‘the
proposed Final Judgment would
30 As discussed, supra n.1, the United States also
received fifteen individual emails about the merger
or settlement that were sent using various channels
outside of the designated procedures for submitting
Tunney Act comments.
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negatively impact competition for
airline service to small communities
and rural areas.’’ While acknowledging
that providing additional slots and gates
to LCCs is likely to increase competition
on certain routes, they express concern
that existing service to smaller
communities would not be protected.
They urge the DOJ to allow all carriers
to bid for the divested slots and gates,
arguing that LCCs would be unlikely to
use those assets to serve small
communities. Senator Thune wrote
separately to reiterate the concerns
expressed in the joint letter, noting that
Southwest’s recent announcement to
cease service at the three smaller
airports of Jackson, Mississippi;
Branson, Missouri; and Key West,
Florida demonstrates that Southwest
and other LCCs are not interested in
serving smaller markets.
• Six commenters generally oppose
the settlement on grounds that it fails to
remedy harms that were alleged in the
Complaint,31 or additional harms that
the commenters foresee from the
transaction.32 These comments urge that
the settlement should be rejected and
the merger enjoined. The commenters
generally assert or presume that the
United States would succeed at trial in
obtaining all relief sought in its
Complaint (e.g., Bellemare Cmts. at 8;
Messina/Alioto Cmts. at 4–5), and take
the position that new LCC entry fostered
by the divestitures will not be
significant in comparison to the alleged
harm and will not remedy the loss of
competition in all of the city-pair
markets that might be affected by the
merger. Two commenters contend that
the settlement violates a ‘‘rule’’ that
‘‘anticompetitive effects in one market
may not be justified by pro-competitive
benefits in another market.’’ AAI Cmts.
at 11; Consumers Union Cmts. at 2. In
addition to challenging the adequacy of
the relief, two of the comments suggest
that the settlement resulted from
improper influence (Messina/Alioto
Cmts. at 1–2; FlyersRights.org Cmts. at
1), and one argues that the CIS contains
insufficient economic analysis
(Relpromax Cmts. at 1).
31 Comments of The American Antitrust Institute
(‘‘AAI’’), joined by AirlinePassengers.org,
Association for Airline Passenger Rights, Business
Travel Coalition, Consumer Travel Alliance, and
FlyersRights.org (‘‘AAI Cmts.’’); Comments of Mr.
Daniel Martin Bellemare; Comments of Mr. Carl
Lundgren on behalf of Relpromax Antitrust, Inc.
(‘‘Relpromax Cmts.’’); Comments of the Consumers
Union; Comments of Mr. Howard Park.
32 Comments of Mr. Gil D. Messina and Mr.
Joseph Alioto (‘‘Messina/Alioto Cmts.’’). These
commenters represent plaintiffs in the Fjord v. AMR
Corp. lawsuit challenging the merger discussed
supra n.4 and accompanying text.
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• The Wayne County, Michigan
Airport Authority (‘‘WCAA’’), operator
of Detroit Metropolitan Airport
(‘‘DTW’’), filed comments stating that,
‘‘[f]or the most part, it appears that the
proposed Settlement promotes [DOJ’s]
goals’’ of fostering airline competition
and avoiding anti-competitive effects. It
expresses concerns, however, that the
remedy will result in New American
eliminating service on the Reagan
National-DTW route, leaving Delta as
the only carrier on that route. WCAA
expresses its view that it is unlikely that
any other carrier will provide competing
service. WCAA therefore requests that
the Final Judgment be modified to
secure a commitment from New
American to continue to operate on the
route or to mandate that acquirers of the
divested slots provide service to DTW.
WCAA Cmts. at 2–5 & 7. WCAA also
filed Supplemental Comments stating
that New American has announced its
intention to eliminate service on the
Reagan National-DTW route.
• In addition to joining the AAI
Comments, the Consumer Travel
Alliance (‘‘CTA’’) and FlyersRights.org
each submitted separate comments.
While noting that the proposed
settlement ‘‘is clearly an attempt to
preserve the same competition and
comparison-shopping that American
consumers should enjoy,’’ CTA argues
that, if the merger goes forward, DOJ
should urge DOT to promote airline
competition in three areas: (1)
disclosure of fees for ancillary products
and services and their distribution
through all channels, (2) disclosure of
all code-shares, and (3) more limited
grants by DOT of antitrust immunity for
alliance agreements between US and
foreign airlines. CTA Cmts. at 2–4.
FlyersRights.org argues that the Court
should ‘‘require full disclosure of
settlement negotiations and lobbying
and hold an evidentiary hearing where
passenger groups can be represented as
interveners or amicus parties.’’
FlyerRights.org Cmts. at 2.
• Allegiant Air, LLC (‘‘Allegiant’’) is
an LCC interested in expanding service
to LAX, and it hopes to obtain access to
the LAX divestiture gates. Its comments
express concern that even after New
American relinquishes claims to
‘‘preferential use’’ of the divested gates,
it may operate out of them on a
‘‘common use’’ basis, thereby limiting
LCC access. Allegiant requests that the
Final Judgment be clarified to make
clear that American may not use the
divested gates even on a ‘‘common use’’
basis, and that DOJ work with the LAX
airport operator to ensure that LCCs
have priority access to the gates.
Allegiant Cmts. at 2–4.
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As several of the comments raise
similar issues, we will address the
comments in five groupings: (1) whether
the Complaint was justified; (2) whether
the remedy fully resolves the harms
alleged in the Complaint; (3) the effect
of the remedy on service patterns at
Reagan National; (4) whether Delta is an
appropriate divestiture candidate; and
(5) procedural issues relating to the
proposed Final Judgment and CIS as
well as other miscellaneous concerns.
Unless otherwise noted, citations to
specific comments merely are
representative of comments on that
issue and are not an indication that
other comments were not considered.
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A. Any Challenge to the Merits of the
Complaint Is Beyond the Scope of
Tunney Act Review
Delta argues that one of the key
theories of the United States’ case is
simply wrong: it states that the
allegations in the Complaint regarding
competitive harm from coordination
among the legacy carriers on capacity,
fares and fees are unfounded. Delta
asserts that the legacy carriers
vigorously compete against each other
on price and product quality, and it
points to low margins in the industry as
evidence that the legacy airlines do not
coordinate.33 Given its claims that the
airline industry is highly competitive
and that the legacy carriers do not
coordinate, Delta appears to be arguing
that the United States’ challenge to the
American/US Airways merger was
fundamentally flawed, such that the
merger should have been approved
unconditionally.34
The United States ‘‘need not prove its
underlying allegations in a Tunney Act
proceeding.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 20. Indeed, challenges to the
validity of the United States’ case, or
alleging that it should not have been
33 Delta argues that the low rate of return on
investment in the airline industry relative to other
industries over the past ten years ‘‘disproves’’ that
there is a history of coordinated conduct among the
legacy carriers. Delta Cmts at 12–15. The airline
industry has suffered at times from poor financial
performance (although recent record earnings by a
number of carriers suggest that this history may not
reflect current industry conditions). But there is no
basis in law or economics to conclude that
coordinated conduct cannot occur in the presence
of financial distress. Firms may be especially
tempted to coordinate when they are facing tough
economic times. See Carl Shapiro, Competition
Policy in Distressed Industries, Remarks as Prepared
for Delivery to ABA Antitrust Symposium:
Competition as Public Policy, May 13, 2009, 7–8
available at https://www.justice.gov/atr/public/
speeches/245857.pdf.
34 See Delta Cmts. at 9 (‘‘The Government’s case
for blocking the transaction between [American]
and [US Airways] was predicated in significant part
on three fallacies about competition in the
industry.’’).
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brought, are challenges to the initial
exercise of the United States’
prosecutorial discretion and are outside
the scope of a Tunney Act proceeding.
A Tunney Act proceeding is not an
opportunity for a ‘‘de novo
determination of facts and issues,’’ but
rather ‘‘to determine whether the
Department of Justice’s explanations
were reasonable under the
circumstances’’ because ‘‘[t]he balancing
of competing social and political
interests affected by a proposed antitrust
decree must be left, in the first instance,
to the discretion of the Attorney
General.’’ United States v. Western Elec.
Co., 993 F.2d 1572, 1577 (D.C. Cir. 1993)
(citations and internal quotation marks
omitted). Courts consistently have
refused to consider ‘‘contentions going
to the merits of the underlying claims
and defenses.’’ United States v. Bechtel
Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th Cir. 1981).
Thus, Delta’s challenge to the legitimacy
of the United States’ underlying case is
beyond the purview of Tunney Act
review.
Nevertheless, the United States notes
in response to this comment that the
merger raised serious competition issues
and that the Complaint provides
specific allegations of competitive
effects arising from the transaction,
particularly with respect to coordination
among the legacy carriers (including
Delta), that fully justified the filing of
this action. See infra § IV.D.
B. The Proposed Settlement Will
Counteract Competitive Harm From the
Merger by Enhancing LCC Competition
Several commenters maintain that the
proposed remedy fails to resolve fully
the harms alleged in the Complaint.35
These commenters point to the
extensive harm alleged in the Complaint
and assert that the new LCC entry
fostered by the divestitures will not
neutralize all of the competitive losses
in all of the city pair markets that might
be affected by the merger. The following
discussion responds to commenters’
contentions that LCCs will not offer
meaningful competition and that the
remedy does not perfectly match the
allegations of harm.
1. LCCs Provide Meaningful
Competition
Several commenters question the
sufficiency of the competition that
LCCs—and in particular Southwest—
will offer as a result of the remedy. As
35 See, e.g., AAI Cmts. at 12 (‘‘At bottom, the
Department’s settlement does not adequately
remedy the harms alleged in the government’s
complaint.’’); Messina/Alioto Cmts. at 7 (‘‘[T]he
proposed settlement does not address the central
concerns raised by the DOJ’s complaint.’’).
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a general response to this point,
substantial evidence supports the
conclusion of the United States that LCC
competition is effective and that
providing slots and gates to enable LCCs
to expand their networks will have a
significant pro-competitive effect. See
supra, § II.B.
Delta argues specifically that LCCs are
not significant competitors for most
passengers, especially business
passengers. Delta adopts a misleading
term for LCCs—domestic leisure carriers
or ‘‘DLCs’’—in an attempt to paint an
inaccurate picture of LCCs as only
serving leisure passengers, only serving
large cities and dense routes, and only
providing no-frills service.36
Although LCCs’ route networks are
not as extensive as those of the legacy
carriers, it is simply not the case that
LCCs single-mindedly compete for
leisure customers to the exclusion of
business passengers, or fly high-volume
routes to the exclusion of serving
smaller communities. For example,
Southwest, the largest LCC, has reported
that approximately 35% of its
passengers are travelling on business
and that corporate sales are increasing.37
It serves numerous medium and small
communities, including Rochester,
Grand Rapids, and Corpus Christi.
Moreover, a key part of Southwest’s
business model is to provide frequent
flights on its routes, a service attribute
highly attractive to business passengers.
Similarly, JetBlue, although smaller
than Southwest, also serves small and
medium communities—including
Richmond, Hartford, and Portland,
Maine—and provides frequent service
on the business routes where it flies.38
On the Boston-Washington route
described in the Complaint—a classic
business route—JetBlue has ten daily
frequencies and carries more passengers
36 E.g., Delta Cmts. at 21 (‘‘Given the limitations
of their business model, DLCs simply cannot and
do not cater to travelers beyond the most pricesensitive consumers seeking travel between
popular, often densely populated markets. Thus,
divestitures to DLCs will add little competition for
time-sensitive passengers, for business passengers,
or for passengers traveling from small- to mediumsized communities.’’) (emphasis in original).
37 Southwest Airlines Co., Q3 2013 Earnings
Conference Call, Corrected Transcript 13 (Oct. 24,
2013). Southwest’s Chief Marketing Officer recently
explained: ‘‘A lot of people view Southwest as a
leisure carrier because of our low fares, but our
DNA is about being a business airline.’’ Jennifer
Rooney, Southwest Airlines CMO Kevin Krone
Explains What’s Behind The New Grown-Up Ads,
Forbes.com, Apr. 22, 2012, available at https://
onforb.es/11Fqy7v.
38 For example, JetBlue serves JFK-Buffalo with
nine flights per day and JFK-Boston with seven
flights per day. These routes are generally
characterized as business, not leisure, markets.
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than American, United and Delta
combined.39
It is also not the case that LCCs offer
only basic, no-frills service that is
unattractive to business passengers. In
some cases, LCCs have actually been at
the forefront in adding amenities
designed to attract business customers.
JetBlue’s service has proved particularly
appealing to Boston business
travelers.40 It recently introduced lie-flat
seats and other amenities on certain
trans-continental flights to appeal to
premium customers.41 Virgin America
also caters to business passengers,
billing its flights to corporate travel
customers as ‘‘your corner office in the
sky.’’ 42 Virgin America was the first
domestic airline to offer fleetwide WiFi,
and its premium class service has been
named the best among domestic airlines
in an annual poll of business travelers
for several years in a row (Delta was
fifth in the most recent poll).43
Southwest and the other LCCs have also
been upgrading their in-flight amenities
to better attract business passengers.
Moreover, while Delta minimizes the
competitive significance of LCCs in its
comments, it has acknowledged in other
settings the significant competitive
effect that LCCs exert, stating in its most
recent annual report that carriers such
as Southwest, JetBlue, Spirit and
Allegiant ‘‘have placed significant
competitive pressure on us in the
United States and on other network
carriers in the domestic market.’’ Delta
Air Lines, Inc., Annual Report (Form
10–K) 17 (Feb. 21, 2014). The other
39 While JetBlue was historically oriented to
leisure traffic, in recent years it has ‘‘increased [its]
relevance to the business customer, particularly in
Boston’’ where it is the largest carrier. JetBlue Corp.,
Annual Report (Form 10–K) at 8 (Feb. 20, 2013).
JetBlue’s CEO stated that 20% of its overall
customers—and 30% of its Boston customers—are
business passengers. JetBlue, Q4–2011 Earnings
Conference Call Transcript (Jan. 26, 2012).
40 One Boston-based business flyer told the Wall
Street Journal: ‘‘The word spread pretty quickly
around here: [JetBlue] had service and nice planes.
. . . A lot of people in the business community
prefer it. The fares are very competitive.’’ Susan
Carey, How JetBlue Cracked Boston, Wall St. J. (Feb.
8, 2012) available at https://on.wsj.com/xHdvX4.
41 Press Release, JetBlue, JetBlue Introduces
MintTM: The Best Coast-to-Coast Premium Service
at an Unbelievably unPremium Price (Sept. 30,
2013) https://investor.jetblue.com/
phoenix.zhtml?c=131045&p=irolnewsArticle&ID=1859952. JetBlue has also
upgraded its standard product to include in-flight
wi-fi and DirecTV. JetBlue was the first airline to
offer DirecTV free of charge at every seat.
42 See, e.g., Corporate Travel, VirginAmerica.com,
https://www.virginamerica.com/corporatetravel.html.
43 The Best Airlines and Hotels for Business
Travelers, cntraveler.com https://cntrvlr.com/
1890tST (Oct. 2013).
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legacy carriers likewise attest to the
significance of LCC competition.44
AAI questions the competitive
significance and long-term impact of
Southwest’s entry on fares and service.
However, the actual examples of the
effects of LCC entry at slot-constrained
airports discussed above (supra
§ II.B.2.a) provide compelling evidence
of the importance of LCC competition.
While AAI casts doubt on the long-term
impact of Southwest’s entry on the
Newark routes,45 the average fare for the
five Newark routes over the three years
since Southwest’s entry has decreased
compared to pre-entry levels and has
decreased 17% relative to changes in
national average fares during this
period.46 In other words, relative to the
trend in nationwide air fares, consumers
in those five Newark routes have
enjoyed significantly lower fares since
Southwest’s entry. Moreover, Southwest
has grown at the destination cities
served out of Newark, demonstrating the
additional procompetitive impact that
can arise from opening slot-constrained
airports to LCCs.47
44 See American Airlines Group, Inc., Annual
Report (Form 10-K) 26 (Feb. 27, 2014) (‘‘Low-cost
carriers have a profound impact on industry
revenues. . . . [LCCs] are expected to continue to
increase their market share through growth and,
potentially, consolidation, and could continue to
have an impact on our overall performance.’’);
United Continental Holdings, Inc., Annual Report
(Form 10-K) 19 (Feb. 25, 2013) (‘‘The increased
market presence of low-cost carriers, which engage
in substantial price discounting, has diminished the
ability of large network carriers to achieve sustained
profitability on domestic and international
routes.’’); US Airways Group, Inc., Annual Report
(Form 10-K) 10 (Feb. 20, 2013) (‘‘[R]ecent years
have seen the growth of low-fare, low-cost
competitors in many of the markets in which we
operate. These competitors include Southwest,
JetBlue, Allegiant, Frontier, Virgin America and
Spirit. These low cost carriers generally have lower
cost structures than US Airways.’’).
45 AAI Cmts. at 8 & n.15. AAI further states that
‘‘[r]ecent empirical studies suggest that the
‘Southwest effect’ has significantly petered out.’’ Id.
at 8 & n.16. AAI fails to note that the principal
study it cites, Michael D. Wittman & William S.
Swelbar, Evolving Trends of U.S. Domestic Airfares:
The Impacts of Competition, Consolidation and
Low-Cost Carriers (MIT Int’l Ctr. For Air Transp.,
Report No. ICAT-2013-07, Aug. 2013), found that
‘‘the presence of an LCC like Southwest, JetBlue,
Allegiant, or Spirit is associated with a decrease in
average one-way fare of between $15-$36,’’ with the
2012 ‘‘Southwest effect’’ constituting a $17 average
decrease in fares. Wittman at 20. Moreover, the true
consumer savings is even greater as the study did
not account for the fact that Southwest does not
charge baggage fees.
46 The national airline ticket price is calculated
using DOT data, available at https://
www.rita.dot.gov/bts/airfares/national/table.
Newark market fare changes are calculated from
USDOT Origin & Destination Survey.
47 AAI dismisses this possibility by suggesting
that it has not occurred at the six cities in which
Southwest began to serve from Newark with slots
it acquired in connection with the UnitedContinental merger. AAI Cmts. at 8 n.17. However,
AAI incorrectly relies on departures by all airlines
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14287
2. The Remedy Adequately Addresses
the Harms Alleged in the Complaint
Some commenters argue that the
remedy is not in the public interest in
that it does not match the harms alleged
in the Complaint. In particular, they
emphasize that the remedy does not
provide for the continuation of US
Airways’s Advantage Fare program or
address each city-pair route in which
American and US Airways provided
competing service.48 As the United
States acknowledged in the CIS, the
proposed remedy does not purport to
replicate the precise form of
competition that will be lost as a result
of the merger. Rather, it requires the
divestiture of significant assets at key
airports to LCCs, a divestiture that will
result in the expansion of LCC
competition across the nation and the
delivery of substantial consumer
benefits.
These procompetitive benefits
compare favorably with—and in some
ways exceed—those afforded by
preserving competition between US
Airways and American. For example,
the benefits of LCC entry and expansion
enabled by the remedy will extend to a
larger number of passengers and deliver
a greater overall benefit to consumers as
compared to the Advantage Fare
program. The Advantage Fare program
is targeted at a narrow segment of
passengers, namely, price-sensitive
business passengers who purchase less
than fourteen days prior to departure
and are willing to take connecting
instead of nonstop service. As the
Complaint noted, approximately 2.5
million roundtrip passengers purchased
Advantage Fare tickets in 2012,
representing about four percent of the
approximately 62.5 million roundtrip
passengers who traveled on the routes
from these airports rather than focusing on
Southwest. In the three years since its entry into
these airports from Newark, Southwest has
increased seats at these airports by over 10%. (Seat
changes are calculated from the Official Airline
Guide.)
48 AAI argues that the settlement violates an ‘‘outof-market benefits rule’’ and that ‘‘anticompetitive
benefits in one market [cannot] be justified by
precompetitive consequences in another.’’ The
‘‘rule’’ that AAI points to relates to how a court can
find a Section 7 violation based on likely
anticompetitive effects in one market,
notwithstanding evidence of likely benefits in other
markets. As explained above, however, the United
States’ concerns with this transaction were broad in
nature. There is no ‘‘rule’’ precluding a settlement
that reasonably resolves broad competitive issues
even if it does not completely eliminate the
possibility of harm in some markets. Indeed, the
Department has made clear that it has prosecutorial
discretion in considering out-of-market procompetitive benefits, see U.S. Dept. of Justice & Fed.
Trade Comm’n., Horizontal Merger Guidelines 30
n.14 (2010), available at www.justice.gov/atr/
public/guidelines/hmg-2010.html.
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where Advantage Fares were offered
that year.49
By comparison, we expect Southwest,
JetBlue and Virgin America to offer over
four million seats per year—enough
capacity for two million roundtrip
passengers—at Reagan National through
their use of the divested slots (which, as
discussed above, is over two million
more seats than US Airways and
American would likely have offered
absent the remedy). Similarly, we
expect the acquirers of the LaGuardia
slots to offer over 1.5 million seats per
year—750,000 roundtrips—through
their use of the divested slots at that
airport, and millions of additional
passengers will benefit from the new
LCC service resulting from the airport
gate divestitures. All of the passengers
served by LCCs as a result of the
divestitures will benefit from lower
fares, not just the last-minute shoppers
that were the primary focus of US
Airways’s Advantage Fare program.
Benefits will also extend to passengers
flying on legacy carriers on routes where
the remedy injects new LCC
competition because the legacy carriers
will likely lower their prices in response
to the new competition.50
Another source of harm alleged in the
Complaint was the loss of head-to-head
competition between US Airways and
American on city-pair routes throughout
the country. As set forth in the
Complaint and Appendix A, American
and US Airways provided competing
service on seventeen nonstop routes and
hundreds of connecting routes.
Although the remedy will not replicate
the competition lost in each of these
routes, it will allow LCCs to launch
more than seventeen new nonstop
routes and enter and expand service on
connecting routes across the country,
almost all of which will be in
competition with New American.
Travelers flying on these routes will
likely benefit from substantial savings
because LCC competition typically has
a much larger effect on fares than legacy
competition.51 While we do not know at
this point the specific routes the LCCs
will enter using the divestiture assets
(and therefore cannot quantify likely
effects), we can be confident that the
head-to-head competition the LCCs will
49 Am. Compl. ¶ 58 & US DOT Origin &
Destination Survey.
50 See Kerry M. Tan, Incumbent Response to
Entry by Low-Cost Carriers in the U.S. Airline
Industry, working paper (May 20, 2013), https://
ssrn.com/abstract=2006471; see also supra n.13
(listing studies).
51 As described above, LCC entry on a route—
whether by nonstop or connecting service—can
have as much as three times the benefit on fares as
that of entry by legacy carriers. See supra n.13 and
accompanying text.
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provide will substantially benefit
millions of consumers nationwide.
Despite these benefits, some
commenters challenge the adequacy of
the proposed remedy because it does
not eliminate the possibility of harm on
every route, pointing in particular to the
fact that the United States cited high
concentration levels in approximately
1,000 city pair markets in Appendix A
of its Complaint. See, e.g., AAI Cmts. at
4. It is well established, however, that
courts ‘‘must accord deference to the
government’s predictions about the
efficacy of its remedies, and may not
require that the remedies perfectly
match the alleged violation.’’ SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17. As
described above, the United States’
primary concerns with this transaction
were broad in nature and the proposed
remedy reasonably addresses those
broad competitive issues even if it does
not seek to precisely match harm on a
route-by-route basis.52
Such comments also ignore the fact
that there has been no finding of
liability in this case. Market
concentration statistics are a ‘‘useful
indicator’’ of the likely competitive
effects of the transaction, Am. Cmpl.
¶ 37, and can be used to establish a
presumption that a transaction is
unlawful under Section 7 of the Clayton
Act. However, even if the United States
were successful in establishing this
presumption, Defendants would have
sought to rebut it by arguing that the
cited market concentration statistics
(high HHIs) are not indicative of
competitive harm on all 1,000 routes,
especially those that already enjoy some
LCC service or where one of the merging
parties had a relatively small share. Def.
52 Route-specific remedies are simply not feasible
in this case nor would they be desirable. Unlike in
some other industries, slot and other airport
facilities necessary to serve air transportation
markets are generally not dedicated to a specific
market, but can be redeployed in different city-pair
markets that originate or terminate at the same
airport. For example, a slot that is currently used
to serve Reagan National-Nashville could
alternatively be used to serve Reagan NationalHartford. Thus, it is not possible to divest a route
or a set of routes to a competing carrier. The
government could, in theory, impose behavioral
rules focused on protecting consumers in particular
markets—e.g., setting a cap on fares charged by New
American, mandating that the merged carrier
employ an ‘‘Advantage Fares’’ type pricing
program, or requiring a buyer of divested gates to
serve a particular route. But those types of
behavioral remedies would be exceedingly difficult
to craft, entail a high degree of risk of unintended
consequences, entangle the government and the
Court in market operations, and raise practical
problems such as the need for ongoing government
monitoring and enforcement. Even a full-stop
injunction of the merger would not have guaranteed
continued competition between the merging
airlines on specific routes, nor would it have
afforded the opportunity to obtain much of the
relief that was made possible by the settlement.
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AMR Corp.’s Answer (Docket No. 80) at
2–3. In essence, the significance of these
market concentration statistics would
have been highly disputed at trial.
While the United States believes it
would have prevailed on these issues at
trial, the settlement avoids the risk and
uncertainty of further litigation for all
involved—factors that are appropriate
for this Court to consider when
evaluating whether a proposed remedy
is in the public interest. See SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 15
(‘‘room must be made for the
government to grant concessions in the
negotiation process for settlements’’).
The proposed remedy secures
substantial benefits for millions of
American consumers and advances
competition in ways that would not
have been possible even if the United
States had prevailed at trial. SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 23
(‘‘Success at trial was surely not
assured, so pursuit of that alternative
may have resulted in no remedy at all.
While a trial may have created an even
greater evidentiary record, that benefit
may not outweigh the possible loss of
the settlement remedies.’’). Thus, giving
deference to the government’s
assessment, the proposed settlement is
well within ‘‘the reaches of the public
interest.’’
C. The Remedy Does Not Mandate
Changes in Service Patterns at Reagan
National
Several commenters expressed
concerns that service patterns at Reagan
National could change as a result of the
slot divestitures.53 New American has
announced its intention to drop service
from Reagan National to certain
destinations,54 and the purchasers of the
slots have not yet announced all of the
new routes they intend to fly. Slots are
generally not designated for use in
specific markets, and thus the acquirers
may make different choices about where
to fly than US Airways and American
have made in the past. The United
States was aware of the potential impact
on existing service when crafting the
remedy and took steps to ensure that the
divestitures would not preclude New
American from using its approximately
500 remaining slots to continue to serve
any market it currently serves. While
there may be some changes in service at
Reagan National in the immediate
53 See Delta Cmts. at 6–7; Rockefeller et al. Cmts.
at 1; WCAA Cmts. at 2.
54 Press Release, American Airlines, American
Airlines to Implement Network Changes as a Result
of DOJ-Mandated Slot Divestitures (Jan. 15, 2014),
available at https://hub.aa.com/en/nr/pressrelease/
american-airlines-to-implement-network-changesas-a-result-of-doj-mandated-slot-divestitures.
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aftermath of the divestitures, on
balance, the competitive landscape at
the airport will be greatly improved as
LCCs acquire the resources they need to
compete effectively across a broad range
of routes.55 As discussed above, the
effect of the divestitures will be a
significant net increase in the number of
seats operated at Reagan National.
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1. Background on Slot Regulation at
Reagan National
In order to appreciate the competitive
implications of the Reagan National
slots divestitures, it is important to
understand the federal regulation at the
airport. Demand for access to Reagan
National has exceeded its capacity since
before the airline industry was
deregulated. The FAA promulgated the
first set of slot rules in 1969 in order to
manage the problem. The rule, known
as the High Density Rule (‘‘HDR’’)
limited the number of landing and takeoff slots available at Reagan National
and other congested airports.56 Since
1969, the FAA and Congress have
periodically revised the number of
takeoffs and landings permitted at the
airports and made various changes to
the slot rules. Reagan National is also
subject to a federally-imposed 1,250mile ‘‘perimeter rule’’ limiting the
distance of nonstop flights to and from
the airport.
Many airlines consider flights to this
airport to be a valuable part of the
service they offer to travelers. Yet, for
decades, carriers wishing to enter or
expand at Reagan National have had
problems obtaining slots. After the
FAA’s initial allocation, a carrier
wishing to begin or expand service at
Reagan National could theoretically buy
or lease slots from an airline that
already owned them, but slots have
55 The fact that a nonstop flight from Reagan
National to a particular city may be discontinued
does not mean that passengers from that city are
unable to fly to Washington. As New American
stated in its press release announcing the nonstop
routes it had decided to cut, ‘‘[c]ustomers in these
communities will still have access to DCA, which
remains a key hub for American, through
connecting flights from one or more of the airline’s
other eight hubs.’’ Id.
56 High Density Traffic Airports, 14 C.F.R.
§ 93.121–133. Under the HDR, the FAA allocated
slots to airlines based on their existing operating
schedules at the airports. Subject to the FAA’s ‘‘use
or lose’’ regulations and other conditions, the
carriers were essentially granted access to the slots
in perpetuity, and had permission to buy, sell, and
trade them. The rules divided slots into two
categories: ‘‘air carrier’’ slots useable by any type of
aircraft, and ‘‘commuter’’ slots that are restricted to
smaller aircraft. The airports governed by the rule
at the time were LaGuardia, John F. Kennedy
International, Newark Liberty International, O’Hare
and Reagan National. Although LaGuardia, JFK, and
Newark are still subject to slot controls, Reagan
National is the only airport governed by the HDR
today.
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been offered for sale or trade
infrequently. In April 2000, Congress
enacted the Wendell H. Ford Aviation
Investment and Reform Act for the 21st
Century (‘‘AIR–21’’) which directed
DOT to grant a limited number of
‘‘exemptions’’ to the Reagan National
slots rules in an attempt to address these
access problems, among other goals.57
The Act created a limited number of
exemptions for flights beyond the 1,250mile perimeter limit and for
destinations within the perimeter.58
Unlike slots, exemptions are granted to
airlines for service on a particular route,
and the grantee airline generally cannot
transfer an exemption to another
airline.59 Although exemptions have
provided modest improvements to the
access problems that smaller carriers
face at the airport, the scarcity of slots
is still a substantial barrier to entry.
A major slots transaction substantially
changed the distribution of slot holdings
at Reagan National in 2011. Pursuant to
the ‘‘US Airways-Delta Slots Swap,’’
Delta traded 84 slots (almost half of its
Reagan National slot holdings at the
time) to US Airways in exchange for
slots at LaGuardia. DOT approved the
transaction subject to, among other
remedies, the parties divesting 16
Reagan National slots to carriers who
held less than 5 percent of the slots at
the airport, a group that consisted
exclusively of LCCs.60 Delta divested 16
57 Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment and
Reform Act for the 21st Century, 49 U.S.C. § 41718,
Pub. L. No. 106–181, 114 Stat. 61, 112–115 (2000).
Through AIR–21, Congress established criteria for
DOT to use when granting ‘‘within-perimeter’’
exemptions that reflect a balance of competition
and other goals: ‘‘[T]he Secretary shall develop
criteria for distributing slot exemptions for flights
within the perimeter to such airports under this
paragraph in a manner that promotes air
transportation: (1) by new entrant air carriers and
limited incumbent air carriers; (2) to communities
without existing nonstop air transportation to
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport; (3) to
small communities; (4) that will provide
competitive nonstop air transportation on a
monopoly nonstop route to Ronald Reagan
Washington National Airport; or (5) that will
produce the maximum competitive benefits,
including low fares.’’ 49 U.S.C. § 41718(b).
58 Many of the ‘‘outside perimeter’’ exemptions
were granted to legacy carriers.
59 49 U.S.C. § 41714(j). Two subsequent federal
statutes, enacted in 2003 and 2012, expanded the
number of exemptions at DCA. Vision 100-Century
of Aviation Reauthorization Act (Vision 100), Pub.
L. No. 108–176 § 425, 117 Stat. 2490, 2555 (2003)
and the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of
2012, Pub. L. No. 112–95 § 414, 126 Stat. 11, 90
(2012).
60 Petition for Waiver of the Terms of the Order
Limiting Scheduled Operations at LaGuardia
Airport, 76 Fed. Reg. 63,702, 63,703 (October 13,
2011). The transaction required DOT review
because the rules governing LaGuardia prohibit
permanent transfers of slots without a waiver from
DOT.
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of its remaining slots to satisfy DOT’s
requirement.
Despite the efforts of Congress and
DOT to ease access to Reagan National,
over 90 percent of the authorizations to
take-off and land at the airport remained
in the hands of legacy carriers prior to
this merger remedy.61 The Reagan
National slot divestitures pursuant to
the proposed Final Judgment resulted in
the transfer of an unprecedented 12
percent of the slots at the airport from
legacy carriers to low-cost carriers. As
the LCCs begin to provide service using
the newly-acquired slots, the
competitive landscape at Reagan
National will change significantly and
benefit consumers in Washington, DC
and across the nation.
2. Nothing in the Remedy Requires New
American to Discontinue Service to
Particular Airports
Three commenters suggest that the
proposed settlement will negatively
impact third parties. Members of
Congress and Delta, on the one hand,
assert that service from Reagan National
to certain small communities currently
served by US Airways will be
eliminated as a result of the
divestitures.62 The operator of the
Detroit Airport, on the other hand,
asserts that the large city of Detroit will
lose a competitor on the Reagan
National-Detroit route, partly as a result
of measures that were taken to protect
small communities. The United States
recognizes that the Court should
consider the impact of the settlement on
third parties. Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1462
(‘‘And, certainly, if third parties contend
that they would be positively injured by
the decree, a district judge might well
hesitate before assuming that the decree
is appropriate.’’). Here, however, the
settlement itself does not mandate that
New American eliminate service on any
particular route, and in fact it ensures
that New American will retain
enormous flexibility to determine which
61 A total of 808 daily slots and 64 daily
exemptions have been allocated to commercial
airlines. New American would have held 69 percent
of the slots post-merger, but as a result of the
remedy, its share will drop to 57 percent, which is
comparable to US Airways’ pre-merger holdings.
Delta holds 13 percent, and United holds 9 percent.
Post-divestitures, Southwest will hold 9 percent,
JetBlue will hold 7 percent, and Virgin America
will hold 1 percent. Other carriers at the airport
include Air Canada, Alaska Airlines, Frontier
Airlines, and Sun Country Airlines, all with less
than 2 percent. (Shares are based on July 2013 FAA
slot holdings and exemption data and do not reflect
changes in slot holdings as the result of Republic’s
recent sale of Frontier, which may prompt the
reallocation of a small number of slots.)
62 Notably, none of the small communities
allegedly affected by the remedy filed comments,
and several of them are located in states that
separately settled with the defendants.
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routes it will serve with its remaining
slots.
The proposed Final Judgment
intentionally does not call for the
divestiture of any of US Airways’s or
American’s ‘‘commuter’’ slots (a total of
about 150), which are particularly wellsuited for service to small communities
given that they are limited to smallersized aircraft. Instead, it calls only for
divestiture of ‘‘air carrier’’ slots. This
distinction was made to increase the
likelihood that New American’s service
to small and medium communities
would be maintained. Defendants’
agreement with DOT, see supra n.11
and accompanying text, also is designed
to preserve service to small
communities by requiring New
American to use its commuter slots at
Reagan National to serve medium and
small airports.63
Moreover, New American will remain
the largest holder of slots at Reagan
National, with over 50 percent of the
total number at the airport. Other than
the commitments it has made to DOT
with respect to commuter slots, it will
maintain complete flexibility to deploy
its slots in any way it sees fit.64 It will
not be obligated to eliminate service on
any route. US Airways and Delta made
this very point when responding to
DOT’s concerns in connection with the
US Airways-Delta Slots Swap. DOT was
concerned that as Delta and US Airways
gave up slots at Reagan National and
LaGuardia, respectively, they would
eliminate service on particular routes
where they competed against each
other. US Airways and Delta explained:
Here, . . . Delta and US Airways are
selling only some of their DCA and LGA
slots to each other and each will
continue to be independent competitors
and retain substantial slots at both
airports. The slots each retains (and
63 Even in cases where third parties have property
or contract rights in the particular assets being
divested, courts have approved settlements where
the decree contains ‘‘provisions designed to protect
against undue harm.’’ See United States v. Pearson
plc, 55 F. Supp. 2d 43, 46–47 (D.D.C. 1999) (finding
decree requiring divestiture of certain textbook
lines to be in public interest notwithstanding claim
by impacted author that his forthcoming book
would be negatively affected by divestiture).
Although the communities served from Reagan
National do not have a property or contract right
to the slots that airlines use to provide such service,
the government has nevertheless structured the
relief to guard against potential undue disruptions
to small communities.
64 It also seems likely that New American has
sufficient capacity to complete the divestitures and
maintain service to most, if not all, of the cities it
currently serves simply by using its slots more
efficiently, e.g., by using larger aircraft and reducing
frequency on some of its routes. US Airways, in
particular, has a history of flying high-frequency,
low-load factor, and often low-capacity aircraft
carrying a high percentage of connecting passengers
on a number of its Reagan National routes.
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those each is selling) are not tied to any
particular city-pair. How the carriers
decide to schedule their remaining slots
is completely within each carrier’s
unilateral discretion, and nothing in this
transaction obligates Delta or US
Airways to stop competing on any
route.65
In short, New American would be
making a business decision as to which
routes it serves. An inherent feature of
the airline industry, and independent of
any changes in slot holdings, is that
airlines reassess how to deploy their
assets and enter and exit routes as they
seek to take advantage of profit
opportunities. For example, in early
2013, US Airways stopped providing
nonstop service between Reagan
National and Bentonville, Arkansas
(XNA), a market it had entered only five
months earlier. Going back in time, US
Airways exited a number of markets it
formerly served from Reagan National—
e.g., Cleveland (CLE), Houston (IAH),
Chicago (ORD), and Atlanta (ATL)—
despite not having given up a single
slot.66
It is not surprising that New American
would make some changes to its service
patterns as a result of the merger, and
indeed it has announced that it will
make some adjustments at Reagan
National. It recently announced that it
would no longer operate ‘‘year-round,
daily nonstop service to 17 destinations
from DCA’’ including large cities such
as San Diego, Minneapolis, and Detroit,
and small communities such as
Jacksonville (NC) and Fort Walton
Beach.67 US Airways had added its
65 Comments of Delta Air Lines, Inc. and US
Airways, Inc. at 31, Federal Aviation
Administration Notice of a Petition for Waiver of
the Terms of the Order Limiting Scheduled
Operations at LaGuardia Airport (2010) (Docket No.
FAA–2010–0109), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=FAA2010-010.
66 US Airways exited Cleveland in November
2005, Houston in February 2006, O’Hare in July
2006, and Atlanta in October 2008. Delta’s route
choices at Reagan National have been even more
fluid. It has eliminated service to cities such as Ft.
Lauderdale (FLL), Birmingham (BHM), Milwaukee
(MKE), Lansing (LAN), Melbourne (MLB), Baton
Rouge (BTR), Raleigh/Durham (RDU), and
Huntsville (HSV)—none of which was prompted by
the loss of slots. In March 2012, Delta even chose
to return a pair of exemptions that it had been
granted specifically for service on the Reagan
National-Jackson, Mississippi (JAN) route, rather
than continuing to fly the route.
67 American Airlines to Implement Network
Changes as a Result of DOJ-mandated Slot
Divestitures, PR Newswire, Jan. 15, 2014, available
at https://hub.aa.com/en/nr/pressrelease/americanairlines-to-implement-network-changes-as-a-resultof-doj-mandated-slot-divestitures. The complete list
includes Augusta, GA (AGS); Detroit, MI (DTW);
Fayetteville, NC (FAY); Fort Walton Beach, FL
(VPS); Islip, NY (ISP); Jacksonville, NC (OAJ); Little
Rock, AR (LIT); Minneapolis, MN (MSP); Montreal,
Canada (YUL); Myrtle Beach, SC (MYR); Nassau,
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Reagan National service to nearly all of
these cities within the last two years.
But none of these cities were guaranteed
nonstop US Airways service in
perpetuity. As time progressed, US
Airways may well have chosen to shift
out of additional markets independently
of the merger.68
3. Mandating Service on Any Particular
Route Is Unwarranted
Wayne County Airport Authority
(‘‘WCAA’’) expressed its concern that,
following the divestitures, New
American will eliminate service on the
Reagan National-Detroit route, leaving
Delta as the only carrier on the route.
WCAA asserted that it is unlikely that
any other carrier will replace that lost
competition, and that the settlement
should be revised to ensure that a
second carrier commits to serving the
market.69 As explained above, the
settlement itself does not require New
American to eliminate its existing
service on any route, including Reagan
National-Detroit. Any modification that
would restrict how airlines use their
assets would be likely to inhibit, not
promote, competition. One of the
benefits of the proposed remedy is that
LCCs will, for the first time, have a
meaningful ability to shift slots to serve
different routes as market conditions
change. For example, if prices increase
on the Reagan National-Detroit route
following New American’s exit,
Southwest and JetBlue will now have
sufficient slot resources such that they
could consider entering the market in
the future, even if they decide not to
serve that route as an initial matter.
Such flexibility would be lost if slot
holders were locked in to serving
particular routes.
Bahamas (NAS); Omaha, NE (OMA); Pensacola, FL
(PNS); San Diego, CA (SAN); Savannah, GA (SAV);
Tallahassee, FL (TLH); and Wilmington, NC (ILM).
68 And despite New American’s claim that the
changes were ‘‘a result of DOJ-mandated
divestitures,’’ some changes were clearly
independent of the divestitures—e.g., there is no
possible connection between the settlement and
New American’s decision to exit Reagan NationalSan Diego, which was made possible through an
‘‘out of perimeter’’ slot exemption that New
American will continue to hold and use for
additional service to LAX. The remedy did not
require divestiture of any exemptions, such as those
needed to provide service to LAX or San Diego.
New American chose on its own to stop serving San
Diego in favor of increasing service to LAX.
69 WCAA Cmts. at 5–7. Some may argue that the
United States should similarly preserve service to
the other markets New American has announced it
will exit. Such a result, however, would raise the
same significant concerns with mandating service
discussed above, see supra, n.52.
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D. Delta Is Not an Appropriate
Divestiture Candidate
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Delta, while first arguing that the
government’s theory of liability was
flawed (supra § IV.A), asserts that it
should be entitled to acquire a
significant portion of the remedy assets,
namely slots at Reagan National and the
two gates at Dallas Love Field. Section
IV.N. of the proposed Final Judgment
requires that the assets be divested to an
acquirer or acquirers who in the
judgment and sole discretion of the
United States ‘‘will remedy the
competitive harm alleged in the
Complaint.’’ In response to Delta’s
request to acquire assets, the United
States considered all the facts and
circumstances in determining whether
Delta should be considered an
appropriate divestiture candidate. The
United States concluded that divesting
assets to Delta would fail to address the
harm arising from the merger and would
be inconsistent with the goals that the
remedy seeks to achieve.
In cases involving allegations of
coordinated effects arising from a
proposed merger, divestiture assets
should not be acquired by firms that are
part of the oligopoly. As the Antitrust
Division’s Policy Guide to Merger
Remedies explains:
If the concern is one of coordinated
effects among a small set of post-merger
competitors, divestiture to any firm in
that set would itself raise competitive
issues. In that situation, the Division
likely would approve divestiture only to
a firm outside that set. [FN: Indeed, if
harmful coordination is a concern
because the merger is removing a
uniquely positioned maverick, the
divestiture likely would have to be to a
firm with maverick-like interests and
incentives.] 70
The Complaint describes oligopoly
behavior by the legacy carriers
(including Delta), such as examples of
legacy carriers ‘‘respecting’’ the nonstop
prices of cooperating legacies but
undercutting the nonstop fares of US
Airways in response to its Advantage
Fares program and tactics used to deter
aggressive discounting and prevent fare
70 U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Antitrust Div., Antitrust
Division Policy Guide to Merger Remedies 28
(2011) [hereinafter Remedies Guide]; see also id. at
31 (‘‘However, this concern is adequately and more
directly addressed by applying the fundamental test
that the proposed purchaser must not itself raise
competitive concerns.’’). The same concepts
appeared in the Antitrust Division’s 2004 Policy
Guide to Merger Remedies. See generally Phillip E.
Areeda and Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law: An
Analysis of Antitrust Principles and Their
Application ¶ 990d (3rd ed. 2011 and Supp. 2013)
(discussing Remedies Guide).
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wars.71 Delta’s Comments ignore these
specific allegations of coordinated
behavior.
The allegations of coordination among
the legacy carriers fully justify the
United States’ discretionary decision to
direct that the divestiture assets be sold
to firms that are unlikely to follow
industry consensus, in this case the
LCCs. The goal of the divestiture
remedy is to enhance the ability of the
LCCs to frustrate coordination among
the legacy carriers. Allowing Delta to
acquire divestiture assets would
undermine the effectiveness of the
remedy to accomplish this goal and,
given Delta’s status as the second largest
slot holder at Reagan National, would
exacerbate the slot concentration issues
at that airport.72
Delta further claims that an LCC-only
divestiture of slots would be ‘‘harmful
to competition’’ as Delta would be more
likely than LCCs to serve small- and
medium-sized communities, including
those communities that New American
is exiting. Delta Cmts. at 24–30. Delta’s
argument ignores the substantial
benefits of LCC competition, especially
with respect to entry at slot-constrained
airports long dominated by legacy
carriers (see supra § II.B.2.a). It also
ignores the fact that LCCs routinely
serve small- and medium-sized
communities; indeed, JetBlue has
already announced schedules for half of
the twelve roundtrip flights it will serve
from Reagan National with its divested
slots and five of these six new flights
will be to small- or medium-sized
communities, either to replace service
that New American is exiting or in
competition with New American.73
Southwest is likely to serve many more
such cities when it announces its
schedule at Reagan National. Finally,
Delta fails to note that none of the
71 Am. Compl. ¶¶ 48–54 (describing legacy
carriers’ response to the Advantage Fares program)
& ¶ 43 (describing ‘‘cross-market initiatives’’
between Delta and US Airways).
72 See Remedies Guide, supra note 70, at 28 (‘‘[I]f
the concern is that the merger will enhance an
already dominant firm’s ability unilaterally to
exercise market power, divestiture to another large
competitor in the market is not likely to be
acceptable, although divestiture to a fringe
incumbent might.’’).
73 JetBlue will provide two flights a day to
Charleston, SC (small community, competing
against New American), two to Hartford, CT
(medium community, competing against New
American), and one to Nassau, Bahamas (small
community, New American is exiting). The other
flight announced so far will be to Tampa, Florida.
JetBlue expects to announce the remaining six
flights later this year. Press Release, JetBlue,
‘‘JetBlue Adds Three Nonstop Destinations for
Customers at Ronald Reagan Washington National
Airport, Offers Introductory One-Way Fares as Low
as $30’’ (Mar. 6, 2014), available at https://
investor.jetblue.com/
phoenix.zhtml?c=131045&p=irol-NewsArticle.
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proposed markets it claims it would
serve with the additional forty-four slots
it requests (i.e., over 40% of the total
number of Reagan National slots being
divested) corresponds to routes New
American is exiting.74
With respect to the divestiture of the
Love Field gates, Delta argues that ‘‘no
reasonable justification’’ exists to favor
LCCs over Delta.75 Delta Cmts. at 30–34.
But the point of the Love Field
divestiture is for an LCC to offer service
at the airport that even Delta recognizes
is ‘‘poised to become a highly attractive
option for business travelers from across
the nation who will be drawn by its
proximity to the Dallas city center.’’ Id.
at 31. The acquirer of the gates will be
able to offer a compelling product to
sought-after business passengers who
otherwise would favor New American’s
service out of its hub at DFW. Obtaining
access to Love Field will significantly
enhance the acquirer’s ability to
meaningfully compete against New
American, thereby furthering the overall
goals of the remedy. See supra § II.B.2.b.
In contrast, Delta, given its overall size
and scope as well as its presence at
DFW, can and does challenge New
American for the business of corporate
customers flying to and from the Dallas
area.
Delta also asserts that it is the only
airline that can offer business travelers
at Love Field a network of domestic and
international destinations, but Delta’s
network offerings are not unique at Love
Field. United Airlines, which has access
to two gates at Love Field, offers a
network of locations substantially
similar to Delta’s. Delta also argues that
only it offers a ‘‘premium product’’ that
includes amenities such as a first-class
cabin and ‘‘Wi-Fi-enabled’’ aircraft, but
it ignores the fact, as discussed above
(supra § IV.B.1), that many LCCs offer,
and were frequently pioneers in
offering, products and amenities that
appeal to business travelers.76
74 Compare Delta Cmts. at 29 (listing proposed
routes to serve) with supra n.67 (listing cities
American has announced it will discontinue service
from Reagan National).
75 Historically, the Wright Amendment restricted
service from Love Field to destinations in certain
nearby states. In 2006, Congress enacted the Wright
Amendment Reform Act of 2006, under which the
perimeter restrictions will be removed effective
October 13, 2014. However, that statute also ratified
and effectuated an agreement among American,
Southwest and Dallas-Ft. Worth area authorities
that capped the number of gates at Love Field to
twenty. See The ‘‘Five Party Agreement,’’ (July 11,
2006) reproduced in S. Rep. No. 109–317, at 4–15
(2006)). Southwest leases 16 of the Love Field gates
and American and United lease two each.
76 Delta also argues that it should obtain the Love
Field gates to prevent Southwest, which currently
operates 16 of the 20 gates at Love Field, from
becoming even more dominant at the airport. As
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Finally, Delta’s claim that it will be
improperly evicted due to the
divestiture is similarly unavailing. Delta
currently operates one gate under a sublease from American that is terminable
on thirty-days’ notice. (Another airline,
Seaport, sub-leases the other American
gate.) But for the remedy, New
American was likely to terminate the
subleases and operate the gates itself,77
an outcome that Delta surely recognizes
given the competitive value of the gates
once the Wright Amendment
restrictions expire in October of this
year. Delta, therefore, never had a
contractual (or other) right or
expectation that it would be able to
remain at the American gate. The
divestiture does not change this fact.
In the end, the thrust of Delta’s
position is that its private interests in
obtaining divestiture assets should
trump the remedial goals of the
proposed Final Judgment.78 Yet, no
third party has a right to demand that
the Government exercise its discretion
in approving divestiture buyers to better
serve the private interests of that third
party. While a court may inquire into
the impact of the settlement on third
parties, it ‘‘should not reject an
otherwise adequate remedy simply
because a third party claims it could be
discussed in the CIS, providing a LCC with the
opportunity to differentiate itself from the large hub
carrier in Dallas should increase its competitive
vigor and ability to grow. CIS at 9–10. Delta
incorrectly assumes that restricting eligible bidders
for the American gate interests would result in
acquisition by Southwest. At least one other LCC
has expressed significant interest. Press Release,
Virgin America, ‘‘Virgin America Plans Dallas
Expansion: Airline wants to bring more businessfriendly, low-fare flight competition to Dallas with
new flights from Love Field,’’ available at https://
www.virginamerica.com/press-release/2014/virginamerica-plans-dallas-expansion.html. The United
States will take all competitive factors into account
when determining which acquirer to approve.
77 See Terry Maxon, The New American Airlines
would have liked to have used the Dallas Love Field
gates, The Dallas Morning News Airline Biz Blog
(Jan. 28, 2014, 6:10 PM), https://
aviationblog.dallasnews.com/2014/01/the-newamerican-airlines-would-have-liked-to-have-usedthe-dallas-love-field-gates.html/?nclick_check=1.
78 It is in Delta’s interests to restrain the growth
of LCCs, as the more LCCs grow, the more likely
it is that they will expand offerings that compete
with Delta. For example, as LCCs obtain more slots
at Reagan National, the more likely it will be that
they will initiate service on the highly-profitable
‘‘hub routes’’ that Delta currently serves (such as
Reagan National to Minneapolis or Detroit). Such a
result could significantly reduce fares and profits,
as occurred when JetBlue was able to compete
against USAirways on its Reagan National-Boston
route, see Am. Compl. ¶ 88. The fewer slots that
are available to low-cost competitors, the less likely
it will be that a LCC will have sufficient slots to
challenge Delta in any of its lucrative Reagan
National routes. The same concept applies at Love
Field, where the divestiture may allow an LCC to
offer highly competitive service to business
passengers that otherwise may have chosen Delta’s
service from DFW.
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better treated.’’ Microsoft, 56 F.3d at
1461 n.9.
E. Additional Concerns Raised by
Commenters
1. Airline Consumer Disclosure and
Alliance Issues Are Outside the Scope
of This Action
The Consumer Travel Alliance
(‘‘CTA’’) recognizes that the PFJ
contains ‘‘some good first steps’’ to
prevent harm from the merger, but
argues that the competitiveness of the
airline industry is undermined by the
failure of the Department of
Transportation to take action in several
areas: ‘‘while DOJ is attempting to
address the loss of airline competition
through settlement regarding this
merger, the DOT diminishes
competition by not requiring truthful
disclosure of airfares and ancillary fees,
deception created by code-sharing and
the de facto mergers spawned by DOT’s
liberal allowance of antitrust
immunity.’’ CTA Cmts. at 2. It urges that
the Department of Justice advocate to
DOT that it take action in these areas to
increase disclosure requirements and
reduce the breadth of airline alliances.
Similarly, Mr. Bellemare’s Comments
appear to suggest that the Court should
enjoin the proposed merger so that the
United States could seek the repeal of
the ‘‘regulatory barrier’’ to entry posed
by slot restrictions at Reagan National
and other airports. Bellemare Cmts. at
16.
As CTA appears to recognize, the
problems it describes and the remedies
it proposes exist independently from
this transaction, and are outside the
scope of the Tunney Act proceedings in
this action. The same is true of the entry
constraints posed by the need to allocate
the limited resource of runway and
airspace capacity at Reagan National
and the New York airports. With respect
to the latter issue, the proposed Final
Judgment explicitly addresses the
transaction’s impact on slot holdings
and entry at slot-controlled airports. We
note, moreover, that the Department of
Justice does regularly consult with DOT
on a formal and informal basis to
preserve and advance airline
competition.
2. The Proposed Final Judgment
Precludes New American from
Reacquiring the Divested Gates at LAX;
No Modification of the Decree Is
Necessary
Allegiant, an LCC, submitted a
comment on the divestiture of gates at
Los Angeles International Airport
(‘‘LAX’’). Allegiant believes that New
American intends to attempt to gain
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access to the gates identified in the
proposed Final Judgment (31A and 31B)
under the airport’s common use
procedures,79 and that this would result
in the gates not being available for use
by LCCs as intended by the proposed
Final Judgment.80 Allegiant requests
that the Final Judgment be modified to
make clear that the prohibition on reacquisition of divested assets (Section
XII) applies to use of gates on a common
use basis. Allegiant further submits that
the United States should work with the
relevant airport authority, Los Angeles
World Airports (‘‘LAWA’’), to ensure
that the gates be available to LCCs.
As Allegiant correctly states, the
purpose of the requirement that
Defendants divest two gates at LAX and
the four other key airports is to provide
access to LCCs in order to allow them
to expand their networks. The intent of
the decree is that there be two gates
available for LCC use beyond what
would have existed but for the
divestiture. The gate divestiture can be
accomplished either by Defendants subleasing the gates to one or more LCCs on
the same terms as Defendants lease the
gates or by Defendants turning the gates
back to the airport ‘‘to enable the
Acquirer to lease them from the airport
operator.’’ Section IV.H. The decree also
prohibits Defendants from re-acquiring
‘‘any interest’’ in the divested assets.
Section XII.
The divestiture process with respect
to the key airport gates—including those
at LAX—has not yet begun.81
Nevertheless, the United States has been
in communication with LAWA
concerning the issues raised by the
terms of the proposed Final Judgment.82
The United States believes that the
existing language in the proposed Final
Judgment prohibiting Defendants from
taking any action to impede the
79 Airport gates leased to a particular carrier on
a preferential use basis allow the leasing carrier to
use the gate subject to the airport authority’s ability
to provide access to another airline if the gate is not
being used by the lessor. The airport authority often
controls some ‘‘common use’’ gates and allocates
them to carriers on a per-use basis.
80 Allegiant’s concern about this issue, which
other LCCs have also raised with the Department of
Justice, demonstrates that there is unmet demand
for gates at LAX and that Delta’s claim to the
contrary, Delta Cmts. at 31 n.50, is false.
81 Prior to the settlement agreement between the
United States and Defendants, US Airways was in
the process of moving to Terminal 3 at LAX where
the two gates subject to the decree are located. It
was originally intended that US Airways would
occupy the gates under a preferential use lease, but
due to the settlement that lease has not been
executed and the two gates subject to the divestiture
are common use gates controlled by the airport.
82 Until the divestiture process is completed, the
two gates may be used by New American or any
other carrier granted access under the airport’s
common use rules.
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divestiture or re-acquiring ‘‘any
interest’’ in the divested assets is
sufficient to prevent New American
from using the airport’s procedures to
block LCC access to the two gates.
Accordingly, it is not necessary to
modify the proposed Final Judgment.
3. The CIS Fully Complies with Tunney
Act Requirements
Relpromax argues that the
Competitive Impact Statement (‘‘CIS’’) is
deficient and requests that the Court
require the United States to rewrite the
CIS and resubmit it for public comment.
Relpromax faults the CIS for failing ‘‘to
provide substantive economic analysis.’’
Relpromax Cmts. at 13. Although
couched in terms of an alleged failure
by the United States to comply with the
Tunney Act, Relpromax’s objections are
in fact largely an objection to the
proposed Final Judgment itself. The CIS
fully complies with the Tunney Act
requirements.
Congress enacted the Tunney Act,
among other reasons, ‘‘to encourage
additional comment and response by
providing more adequate notice
[concerning a proposed consent
judgment] to the public.’’ S. Rep. No.
93–298 at 5 (1973); H.R. Rep. No. 93–
1463 at 7 (1974), reprinted in 1974
U.S.C.C.A.N. 6535, 6538. The CIS is the
primary means by which Congress
sought to provide more adequate notice
to the public. The Tunney Act requires
that the CIS ‘‘recite’’:
(1) the nature and purpose of the
proceeding;
(2) a description of the practices or
events giving rise to the alleged
violations of the antitrust laws;
(3) an explanation of the proposal for
a consent judgment, including an
explanation of any unusual
circumstances giving rise to such
proposal or any provision contained
therein, relief to be obtained thereby,
and the anticipated effects on
competition of such relief;
(4) the remedies available to potential
private plaintiffs damaged by the
alleged violation in the event that such
proposal for a consent judgment is
entered in such proceeding;
(5) a description of the procedures
available for modification of such
proposal; and
(6) a description and evaluation of
alternatives to such proposal actually
considered by the United States.
15 U.S.C. § 16(b).
There is no dispute that the CIS
satisfies the requirements of the Tunney
Act with respect to items 1, 2, 4 and 5
listed above. Relpromax asserts that the
CIS fails to adequately address item 3
(explanation of the proposed judgment)
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because it lacks sufficient economic
analysis.83 Relpromax provides its own
economic analysis, arguing that it shows
that the proposed decree is
inadequate.84 Relpromax’s comments
about the adequacy of the CIS are thus
in fact complaints about the substance
of the proposed Final Judgment. It is
clear from the detailed substantive
comments filed here (including those of
Relpromax) that the CIS contains
sufficient explanation to allow the
public to understand the provisions of
the decree and submit meaningful
comments.
Relpromax also complains that the
CIS does not meet the Tunney Act
requirements because the description of
alternatives to the decree considered by
the United States (item 6 above)
discusses only continuing to litigate the
case through trial. Relpromax argues
that because the statute refers to
‘‘alternatives’’ in the plural the United
States is required to describe multiple
alternatives. Relpromax Cmts. at 10–11.
The statute only requires that the CIS
describe alternatives the United States
‘‘actually considered.’’ 15 U.S.C. § 16(b).
In this case the United States did not
consider alternatives other than
continuing the litigation, and therefore
the CIS meets the requirements of the
Tunney Act.
allegations that the settlement is the
result of improper lobbying or political
pressure are both unsubstantiated and
meritless. The settlement resulted from
good faith negotiations between the
Antitrust Division and Plaintiff States,
on the one hand, and Defendants, on the
other. It reflects substantial relief that
addresses the competitive harm alleged
in the Complaint. In short, there is no
basis to allege that the settlement results
from any impropriety.85
The commenters’ mere speculation of
bad faith or malfeasance is insufficient
to justify rejection of a proposed consent
decree. See United States v. Associated
Milk Producers, 394 F. Supp. 29, 39–40
(W.D. Mo. 1975), aff’d, 534 F.2d 113
(8th Cir. 1976) (finding that lobbying
activities by the defendant—even ones
that are ‘‘intensive and gross’’—were
insufficient to reject proposed decree or
require further evidentiary hearing).
Moreover, one commenter’s request for
a ‘‘full disclosure of the papers leading
up to the settlement,’’ FlyerRights.org
Cmts. at 1, should be rejected as the
commenter offers no reason to doubt the
sufficiency of Defendants’ compliance
with the Tunney Act’s disclosure
requirements, 15 U.S.C. § 16(g), and no
basis to otherwise justify a fishing
expedition. See Associated Milk
Producers, 394 F. Supp. at 38–40.
4. The Remedy Is Not the Result of
Political Pressure
Certain commenters argue that that
the settlement is not in the public
interest because—according to them—
the settlement resulted from lobbying by
the airlines and political pressure
directed toward the United States.
Messina/Alioto Cmts. at 1;
FlyerRights.org Cmts. at 1. Any
5. Closing of the Merger Prior to Entry
of the Final Judgment Is Consistent with
Tunney Act Requirements
Two commenters suggest that
allowing Defendants to consummate the
merger prior to entry of the Final
Judgment was inconsistent with the
Tunney Act and not appropriate. AAI
Cmts. at 1 n.1; Relpromax Cmts. at 12–
13. It is common practice to close a
transaction prior to completion of the
Tunney Act process. Nothing in the
Tunney Act prevents the parties from
closing and courts have long
acknowledged and accepted this
practice. See, e.g., United States v.
InBev N.V./S.A., 2009–2 Trade Cas.
(CCH) ¶ 76,736 at 8 (D.D.C. 2009)
(‘‘consistent with asserted Department
of Justice policy . . . the merger was
allowed to close . . . while approval of
the proposed Final Judgment [was]
83 Relpromax seems to suggest that a CIS should
include a level of analysis similar to that contained
in a Regulatory Impact Analysis (‘‘RIA’’) required
by Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 when a
federal regulatory agency is considering a
significant rule. Relpromax Cmts. at 15. RIAs must
contain detailed cost-benefit analyses as well as a
discussion of a number of specified possible
alternatives to a proposed regulation. See Office of
Mgmt. & Budget, Exec. Office of the President, OMB
Circular A–4, Regulatory Analysis (2003). This is far
beyond what is required in a CIS.
84 Relpromax purports to quantify harm from the
merger and benefits from the proposed remedy.
Relpromax Cmts. at 2–9. However, most of its
estimates consists merely of ‘‘round number
figures’’ for harms the author was ‘‘unable to
calculate.’’ Id. at 4. Moreover, Relpromax’s
methodology grossly understates the likely benefits
of the proposed remedy. In particular, it assumes
that any LCC entry and expansion that results from
improved access to congested airports will merely
serve to partially offset price increases resulting
from lost competition between the merging parties.
On the contrary, in markets where the proposed
remedy facilitates LCC entry and expansion,
consumers are likely to enjoy substantial net
benefits.
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85 The Messina/Alioto comments also wrongly
suggest that the representatives of consumers,
unlike the airlines, did not have access to federal
officials. Messina/Alioto Cmts. at 1–2. In fact, as
some of the other commenters can attest, the
Department of Justice had meetings and
conversations with affected parties throughout the
entire investigation and litigation process. The
United States took the views of consumers into
account when crafting the proposed relief. The
United States was not, of course, at liberty to share
the details of sensitive settlement negotiations with
third parties.
E:\FR\FM\13MRN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 49 / Thursday, March 13, 2014 / Notices
pending’’); United States v. SBC
Commc’ns, Inc., 489 F. Supp. 2d 1, 8
(D.D.C. 2007) (noting that the
transaction closed over a year prior to
entry of the Final Judgment ‘‘in keeping
with [DOJ’s] standard practice that
neither stipulations nor pending
proposed final judgments prohibit the
closing of the mergers’’); United States
v. Pearson plc, 55 F. Supp. 2d 43, 44–
45 (D.D.C. 1999) (observing that the
transaction was consummated and
divestitures completed prior to the
public interest determination under the
Tunney Act).86 Of course, the United
States retains the right to withdraw its
consent to the decree or the settlement
could be rejected by the Court.
Defendants, by choosing to close prior
to entry of the Final Judgment, have
accepted the risk of undoing the merger
should it be necessary.
CONCLUSION
After reviewing the public comments,
the United States continues to believe
that the proposed Final Judgment, as
drafted, provides an effective and
appropriate remedy for the antitrust
violation alleged in the Complaint and
is therefore in the public interest. Upon
publication of this Response to
Comments in the Federal Register, the
United States will file a certification
that all of the requirements of the APPA
have been satisfied, and will file a
motion with this Court to enter the
proposed Final Judgment. The United
States submits that a hearing is not
necessary.
Dated: March 10, 2014.
Respectfully submitted,
Michael D. Billiel (DC Bar No. 394377)
U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, 450 Fifth Street NW., Suite 8000,
Washington, DC 20530, Telephone: (202)
307–6666, Facsimile: (202) 307–5802, Email:
michael.billiel@usdoj.gov
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
Notice Pursuant to the National
Cooperative Research and Production
Act of 1993; Sematech, Inc. d/b/a
International Sematech
Notice is hereby given that, on
February 6, 2014, pursuant to Section
6(a) of the National Cooperative
Research and Production Act of 1993,
15 U.S.C. 4301 et seq. (‘‘the Act’’),
Sematech, Inc. d/b/a International
Sematech (‘‘SEMATECH’’) has filed
written notifications simultaneously
with the Attorney General and the
Federal Trade Commission disclosing
changes in its membership. The
notifications were filed for the purpose
of extending the Act’s provisions
limiting the recovery of antitrust
plaintiffs to actual damages under
specified circumstances. Specifically,
Ebara Corporation, Tokyo, JAPAN;
Inficon, Syracuse, NY; Micron,
Manassas, VA, and TowerJazz, Migdal
Haemek, ISRAEL, have been added as
parties to this venture.
No other changes have been made in
either the membership or planned
activity of the group research project.
Membership in this group research
project remains open, and SEMATECH
intends to file additional written
notifications disclosing all changes in
membership.
On April 22, 1988, SEMATECH filed
its original notification pursuant to
Section 6(a) of the Act. The Department
of Justice published a notice in the
Federal Register pursuant to Section
6(b) of the Act on May 19, 1988 (53 FR
17987).
The last notification was filed with
the Department on November 12, 2013.
A notice was published in the Federal
Register pursuant to Section 6(b) of the
Act on December 9, 2013 (78 FR 73884).
[FR Doc. 2014–05555 Filed 3–12–14; 8:45 am]
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement, Antitrust
Division.
BILLING CODE 4410–11–P
[FR Doc. 2014–05452 Filed 3–12–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
86 The
Bankruptcy Court hearing the AMR case
specifically rejected as ‘‘based on a faulty
assumption’’ the private plaintiff’s argument that
the Tunney Act bars consummation of a merger
pending entry of a proposed Final Judgment.
Memorandum of Decision and Order at 22–23, In
re AMR Corp. & Fjord v. AMR Corp., (Bankr.
S.D.N.Y. Nov. 27, 2013) (11–15463 & Adv. Pr. No.
13–01392), available at https://
www.amrcaseinfo.com/pdflib/72_01392.pdf. The
Bankruptcy Court denied plaintiff’s request to
enjoin the closing of the merger. Id.
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Antitrust Division
Notice Pursuant to the National
Cooperative Research and Production
Act of 1993; National Armaments
Consortium
15 U.S.C. 4301 et seq. (‘‘the Act’’),
National Armaments Consortium
(‘‘NAC’’) has filed written notifications
simultaneously with the Attorney
General and the Federal Trade
Commission disclosing changes in its
membership. The notifications were
filed for the purpose of extending the
Act’s provisions limiting the recovery of
antitrust plaintiffs to actual damages
under specified circumstances.
Specifically, Bulova Technologies
Group Inc., Tampa, FL; Colt Defense
LLC, Hartford, CT; D&S Consultants,
Inc. (DSCI), Eatontown, NJ; Defense
Research Associates, Inc. (DRA),
Beavercreek, OH; Innovative Materials
and Processes, LLC, Rapid City, SD;
Quantum Technology Consultants, Inc.,
Franklin Park, NJ; South Dakota School
of Mines and Technology, Rapid City,
SD; The Charles Stark Draper
Laboratory, Inc., Cambridge, MA;
Touchstone Research Laboratory, LTD,
Triadelphia, WV; University of
Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, LA;
and Vingtech, Biddeford, ME, have been
added as parties to this venture.
Also, NAVSYS Corporation, Colorado
Springs, CO; Thales USA Defense &
Security, Inc, Arlington, VA; Tiburon
Associates, Inc., Alexandria, VA;
Vermillion Incorporated, Wichita, KS;
and Wilkes University, Wilkes-Barre,
PA, have withdrawn as parties to this
venture.
No other changes have been made in
either the membership or planned
activity of the group research project.
Membership in this group research
project remains open, and NAC intends
to file additional written notifications
disclosing all changes in membership.
On May 2, 2000, NAC filed its original
notification pursuant to Section 6(a) of
the Act. The Department of Justice
published a notice in the Federal
Register pursuant to Section 6(b) of the
Act on June 30, 2000 (65 FR 40693).
The last notification was filed with
the Department on November 14, 2013.
A notice was published in the Federal
Register pursuant to Section 6(b) of the
Act on December 9, 2013 (78 FR 73884).
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement, Antitrust
Division.
[FR Doc. 2014–05454 Filed 3–12–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
Notice is hereby given that, on
February 6, 2014, pursuant to Section
6(a) of the National Cooperative
Research and Production Act of 1993,
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 49 (Thursday, March 13, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14279-14294]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-05555]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States, et al., v. US Airways Group, Inc., et al.; Public
Comments and Response on Proposed Final Judgment
Pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C.
16(b)-(h), the United States hereby publishes below the Response of the
United States to Public Comments on the proposed Final Judgment in
United States, et al., v. US Airways Group, Inc., et al., Civil Action
No. 1:13-CV-1236-CKK (D.D.C. 2013).
Copies of the 14 Public Comments and the Response of the United
States to Public Comments are available for inspection at the
Department of Justice Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW., Suite
1010, Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202-514-2481); on the Department
of Justice's Web site at https://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/usairways/; and at the Office of the Clerk of the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia, 333 Constitution Avenue
NW., Washington, DC 20001. Copies of any of these materials may also be
obtained upon request and payment of a copying fee.
Patricia A. Brink,
Director of Civil Enforcement.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et al. Plaintiffs, v. US AIRWAYS
GROUP, INC. and AMR CORPORATION DEFENDANTS.
Case No. 1:13-cv-1236 (CKK)
RESPONSE OF PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES TO PUBLIC COMMENTS ON THE PROPOSED
FINAL JUDGMENT
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION................................................ 4
I. Procedural History....................................... 5
II. The Complaint and the Proposed Settlement............... 7
A. The Complaint........................................ 7
B. The Proposed Final Judgment.......................... 10
1. Terms of the Proposed Final Judgment and Status 10
of the Divestitures................................
2. Explanation of the Proposed Final Judgment....... 11
a. Consumer Benefits from LCC Entry............. 12
b. The Importance of the Remedy Assets to 14
Enhancing LCC Competition......................
III. Standard of Judicial Review............................ 19
IV. Public Comments and the United States' Response......... 23
A. Any Challenge to the Merits of the Complaint Is 25
Beyond the Scope of Tunney Act Review..................
B. The Proposed Settlement Will Counteract Competitive 27
Harm From the Merger by Enhancing LCC Competition......
1. LCCs Provide Meaningful Competition.............. 27
2. The Remedy Adequately Addresses the Harms Alleged 31
in the Complaint...................................
C. The Remedy Does Not Mandate Changes in Service 36
Patterns at Reagan National............................
[[Page 14280]]
1. Background on Slot Regulation at Reagan National. 37
2. Nothing in the Remedy Requires New American to 39
Discontinue Service to Particular Airports.........
3. Mandating Service on Any Particular Route Is 43
Unwarranted........................................
D. Delta Is Not an Appropriate Divestiture Candidate.... 44
E. Additional Concerns Raised by Commenters............. 49
1. Airline Consumer Disclosure and Alliance Issues 49
Are Outside the Scope of This Action...............
2. The Proposed Final Judgment Precludes New 50
American from Reacquiring the Divested Gates at
LAX; No Modification of the Decree Is Necessary....
3. The CIS Fully Complies with Tunney Act 51
Requirements.......................................
4. The Remedy Is Not the Result of Political 54
Pressure...........................................
5. Closing of the Merger Prior to Entry of the Final 55
Judgment Is Consistent with Tunney Act Requirements
CONCLUSION.................................................. 56
INTRODUCTION
Pursuant to the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(b)-(h) (``APPA'' or ``Tunney Act''),
the United States hereby files the public comments concerning the
proposed Final Judgment in this case and the United States' response to
these comments. For the reasons discussed below, the United States
continues to believe that the remedy it obtained from Defendants will
address the competitive harm alleged in this action and is plainly in
the public interest. Accordingly, the United States proposes no
modifications to the proposed Final Judgment.
The remedy is a major victory for American consumers. It will
enable Low Cost Carriers (``LCCs'') to fly millions of new passengers
per year to destinations throughout the country. It fully addresses the
harm that would have resulted from New American's control of nearly 70%
of the limited takeoff and landing slots at Ronald Reagan Washington
National Airport (``Reagan National''). It enables LCCs to acquire
otherwise unobtainable slots and gates at Reagan National (Southwest
Airlines, JetBlue Airways and Virgin America) and LaGuardia Airport
(Southwest and Virgin America), and to obtain gates at other busy
airports around the country such as Los Angeles International Airport,
Chicago O'Hare International Airport, and Dallas Love Field. And by
introducing new low-cost capacity and service on numerous routes around
the country, it enhances the ability of LCCs to thwart industry
coordination among the legacy carriers. The competitive significance of
the remedy is reflected in the value being paid for the divested Reagan
National and LaGuardia slots--over $425 million--which is unprecedented
in the airline industry and among the most substantial merger remedies
in any industry.
The United States has received a total of fourteen comments
reflecting divergent views.\1\ One suggests that the lawsuit should not
have been filed in the first place. Others assert that the settlement
does not go far enough to remedy potential harm from the merger, and
many raise issues that are outside the scope of an antitrust review.
After careful consideration of these comments, the United States has
concluded that nothing in them casts doubt on the very substantial
public interest that will be achieved by the proposed remedy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In addition, fifteen individuals sent emails about
competition concerns relating to the settlement to the United States
using various channels outside of the designated procedures for
submitting Tunney Act comments. The United States has reviewed all
of these emails and none of them raise any issue not already
addressed in this Response to Comments. Although these emails are
not formal Tunney Act comments, we are nevertheless publishing them
in this case but redacting all identifying information about the
authors. If the Court requests, the United States will provide
unredacted copies under seal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The United States has published the comments and this response on
the Antitrust Division Web site and is submitting to the Federal
Register this response and the Web site address at which the comments
may be viewed and downloaded, as set forth in the Court's Orders dated
November 20, 2013 (Docket No. 154) and February 27, 2014 (Docket No.
158).\2\ Following Federal Register publication, the United States will
move the Court, pursuant to 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(b)-(h), to enter the
proposed Final Judgment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ This Response and all of the public comments may be found on
the Antitrust Division's Web site at https://www.justice.gov/atr/cases/usairways/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Procedural History
On August 13, 2013, the United States, joined by several states and
the District of Columbia (``Plaintiff States''), filed a Complaint in
this matter alleging that the proposed merger of US Airways Group, Inc.
(``US Airways'') and AMR Corporation, the parent of American Airlines,
Inc., (``American''), creating New American, would violate Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18.
In the three months following the filing of the Complaint,
Plaintiffs and Defendants actively prepared for trial and accomplished
a substantial amount of pre-trial groundwork, including completion of
fact discovery. Trial in this matter was scheduled to begin on November
25, 2013.
While the parties continued to litigate, they engaged in settlement
discussions that culminated in a consensual resolution of the matter.
On November 12, 2013, the United States filed the proposed Final
Judgment (Docket No. 147-2), a Competitive Impact Statement (``CIS,''
Docket No. 148), and an Asset Preservation Order and Stipulation signed
by the parties consenting to entry of the proposed Final Judgment after
compliance with the requirements of the APPA (Docket No. 147-1).
As Defendant AMR Corporation was in bankruptcy, the settlement
required approval by the bankruptcy court. On November 27, 2013, the
United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York
entered an order finding that the settlement satisfied the requirements
for approval under the Bankruptcy Code, granted AMR's motion to
consummate the merger, and denied a request for a temporary restraining
order filed by a private plaintiff seeking to enjoin the merger on
antitrust grounds.\3\ AMR exited bankruptcy protection, and the merger
closed on December 9, 2013. The Bankruptcy Court has retained
jurisdiction to continue to hear the private case.\4\
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\3\ See Order Pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 9019(a) Approving
Settlement Between Debtors, US Airways, Inc., and United States
Department of Justice, In re AMR Corp., (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2013), ECF
No. 11321, available at https://www.amrcaseinfo.com/pdflib/11321_15463.pdf, and accompanying Memorandum, available at https://www.amrcaseinfo.com/pdflib/72_01392.pdf.
\4\ Fjord v. AMR Corp., (In re AMR Corp.) Adv. Pr. No. 13-01392
(Bankr. S.D.N.Y.), docket available at https://www.amrcaseinfo.com/adversary_01392.php. (The lead attorney in the private case, Joseph
Alioto, submitted a Tunney Act comment in this proceeding.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to the APPA and this Court's November 20, 2013 Order, the
United States published the proposed Final Judgment and CIS in the
Federal Register on November 27, 2013, see 78 Fed. Reg. 71377, and
caused summaries
[[Page 14281]]
of the terms of the proposed Final Judgment and CIS, together with
directions for submission of written comments relating to the proposed
Final Judgment, to be published in the Washington Post, Dallas Morning
News, and Arizona Republic for seven days, beginning on November 25,
2013 and ending on December 9, 2013. Defendants filed the statements
required by 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(g) on December 9, 2013. The 60-day
public comment period ended on February 7, 2014. The United States
received fourteen comments, as described below and attached hereto.
II. The Complaint and the Proposed Settlement
A. The Complaint
The Complaint alleged that the likely effect of the merger of US
Airways and American, which would reduce the number of major domestic
airlines from five to four and the number of ``legacy airlines'' \5\
from four to three, would be to lessen competition substantially in the
sale of scheduled air passenger service in city pair markets throughout
the United States, and in the market for takeoff and landing
authorizations (``slots'') at Reagan National.\6\
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\5\ ``Legacy airlines,'' as used herein, refers to the carriers
that have operated interstate service since before deregulation and
rely on nationwide hub-and-spoke networks.
\6\ Four of the busiest airports in the United States--including
Reagan National and LaGuardia--are subject to slot limitations
governed by the FAA. The lack of availability of slots is a
substantial barrier to entry at those airports, especially for LCCs.
See Am. Compl. ]] 84-86.
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One of the United States' concerns was that the merger would make
it easier for the remaining legacy carriers--New American, United and
Delta--to cooperate, rather than compete, on price and service. Amended
Complaint (``Am. Compl.,'' Docket No. 73) ]] 41-81. Such coordinated
conduct deprives consumers of the benefits of full and vigorous
competition.\7\
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\7\ The potential for mergers to increase the likelihood of such
coordinated interaction among competitors is a central focus of the
DOJ's merger review. See U.S. Dep't of Justice & Fed. Trade Comm'n,
Horizontal Merger Guidelines Sec. 7 (Aug. 19, 2010), available at
https://www.justice.gov/atr/public/guidelines/hmg-2010.html.
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As explained in the Complaint, the structure of the airline
industry was already conducive to coordinated behavior among the legacy
carriers. Id., ]] 41-47. For example, on routes where one legacy
carrier offers nonstop service, the other legacies generally
``respect'' (a term used by American) the nonstop carrier's pricing by
pricing their connecting service at the same level as the nonstop
carrier--notwithstanding the service disadvantages associated with
connecting service. US Airways, however, differed from the other legacy
carriers in that on some routes it offered its ``Advantage Fares''
program under which it provided discounts for connecting service
compared to other carriers' nonstop fares, particularly for last-minute
travelers. The structure of the New American network reduced its
incentives to continue the Advantage Fare program. Id., ]] 48-58.
In addition to the risk of harm from the likely elimination of the
Advantage Fares program, the Complaint alleged that the merger would
likely enhance coordinated interaction among the legacy carriers with
respect to capacity reductions, id., ]] 59-70, and ancillary fees, id.,
]] 71-81. It also alleged potential anticompetitive effects resulting
from the dominance of the merged airline at Reagan National, where it
would control 69 percent of the take-off and landing slots, id., ]] 83-
90, and from the elimination of head-to-head competition between US
Airways and American on numerous nonstop and connecting routes, id., ]]
38 & 82.
The Complaint also alleged that if the merger went through, the
other established legacy carriers--Delta and United--would be unlikely
to undercut anticompetitive price increases or expand in response to
capacity reductions by the merged airline as ``those carriers are
likely to benefit from and participate in such conduct by coordinating
with the merged firm.'' Id., ] 92. LCCs, such as Southwest, JetBlue,
Virgin America, and Spirit Airlines, on the other hand, offer
``important competition on routes they fly,'' but have less extensive
networks and face barriers to expansion such as a lack of access to
slots and gate facilities necessary to serve constrained airports. Id.,
]] 3 & 91, 93. For example, although Southwest carries the most
domestic passengers of any airline, its network is limited compared to
the legacy carriers with respect to the significant business-oriented
routes served from Reagan National and LaGuardia.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See, e.g., Motion for Leave to File Amicus Curiae Brief by
Southwest Airlines Co. (Nov. 7, 2013, Docket No. 142) at 3 (``The
pro-competitive effect of Southwest's entry and service is
effective, however, only when Southwest has the ability to enter a
particular market. While Southwest serves over 90 destinations in
the United States, it has extremely limited access to Reagan
National . . . and LaGuardia . . . due to severe entry restrictions.
Service to those airports is significantly limited by the allocation
of take-off and landing slots, and Southwest has been able to obtain
only a very small number of slots at those two airports.'').
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B. The Proposed Final Judgment
1. Terms of the Proposed Final Judgment and Status of the Divestitures
As set forth in the proposed Final Judgment, Defendants are
required to divest or transfer to purchasers approved by the United
States, in consultation with the Plaintiff States:
104 air carrier slots at Reagan National (i.e., all of
American's pre-merger air carrier slots) and associated gates and other
ground facilities; \9\
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\9\ Slots at Reagan National are designated as either ``air
carrier,'' which may be operated with any size aircraft that meets
the operational requirements of the airport, or ``commuter,'' which
must be operated using aircraft with 76 seats or fewer.
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34 slots at New York LaGuardia International Airport
(``LaGuardia'') and associated gates and other ground facilities; and
rights to and interests in two airport gates and
associated ground facilities at each of the following airports: Chicago
O'Hare International Airport (``ORD''), Los Angeles International
Airport (``LAX''), Boston Logan International Airport (``BOS''), Miami
International Airport (``MIA''), and Dallas Love Field (``DAL'').
Defendants have completed the divestiture of the 34 LaGuardia slots
by (1) selling the 10 slots to Southwest that American had been leasing
to Southwest (see PFJ, Sec. IV.G.1), (2) selling an additional bundle
of 12 slots to Southwest, and (3) selling a bundle of 12 slots to
Virgin America. Defendants are in the process of completing the
divestiture of the 104 Reagan National slots. They have divested the 16
slots to JetBlue that American previously had been leasing to JetBlue
(see PFJ, Sec. IV.F.1) and have sold an additional 24 slots to
JetBlue. Defendants have agreed to divest 56 slots to Southwest \10\
and eight slots to Virgin America. The parties expect to close the
Southwest and Virgin America transactions on March 10, 2014 or soon
thereafter. The United States, in consultation with the Plaintiff
States, approved the LaGuardia and Reagan National divestitures. The
acquirers will begin operating the slots later this year. The process
for the divestiture of the gates at the remaining airports is expected
to occur in the near future.
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\10\ Of the 104 air carrier slots being divested, 102 are for
daily service and the remaining two are allocated for Sunday-only
service. Southwest is purchasing the bundles of slots containing the
two ``Sunday-only'' slots. The United States understands that
Southwest has declined these ``Sunday only'' slots and that they
will be returned to the Federal Aviation Administration for
reallocation in consultation with the Department of Justice.
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In addition to the relief provided by the proposed Final Judgment,
[[Page 14282]]
Defendants reached an agreement with the Plaintiff States to maintain
service from at least one of New American's hubs to specified airports
in the Plaintiff States for a period of five years, Supplemental
Stipulated Order (Docket No. 151), and an agreement with the United
States Department of Transportation (``DOT'') to use all of its
commuter slots at Reagan National to serve airports designated as
medium, small and non-hub airports (i.e., airports accounting for less
than one percent of annual passenger boardings) for a period of at
least five years.\11\
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\11\ The DOT agreement is available at https://www.dot.gov/airconsumer/merger-usairways-amrcorp. The European Commission also
reviewed the merger. British Airways, which has been given antitrust
immunity with American for the oneworld alliance, and US Airways are
the only two nonstop competitors in the Philadelphia-London Heathrow
market (``PHL-LHR''). The European Commission cleared the merger
after the parties made commitments to divest a slot pair at slot-
constrained London Heathrow Airport and to offer supportive
interline and frequent flyer agreements to an entrant into the PHL-
LHR market. See Press Release, European Commission, ``Mergers:
Commission approves proposed merger between US Airways and American
Airlines' holding company AMR Corporation, subject to conditions''
(Aug. 5, 2013), available at https://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-13-764_en.htm.
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2. Explanation of the Proposed Final Judgment
The proposed Final Judgment effectively addresses the harm to
competition that was likely to result from the merger. The LCCs that
acquire the assets will establish stronger positions at strategically
important destinations--including top business markets--where it has
been particularly difficult to obtain access. These assets will provide
them with the incentive to invest in new capacity and position them to
offer more meaningful competition system-wide, forcing legacy carriers
to respond to that increased competition. And, by increasing the scope
of the LCCs' networks, the divestitures will bring the consumer-
friendly policies of the LCCs to more travelers across the country. For
example, neither Southwest nor JetBlue currently charges customers a
first bag fee while all of the legacy carriers charge $25 per bag.
Strengthened by increased access to capacity-constrained airports,
the LCCs will be able to fly more people to more places at more
competitive fares. In this way, although the proposed remedy will not
create a new independent airline or guarantee the continued existence
of Advantage Fares on all routes, it will impede the industry's
evolution toward a tighter oligopoly and deliver benefits to millions
of consumers that could not be obtained even by enjoining the merger.
a. Consumer Benefits from LCC Entry
The consumer benefits that flow from LCC entry are well
established. Previous work by the Department of Justice has shown that
the presence of an LCC on a nonstop route results in both significant
price reductions and capacity increases.\12\ An extensive body of
economic research confirms that LCC entry on a route--whether by
nonstop or connecting service--reduces fares three times as much as the
addition of a legacy competitor.\13\
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\12\ Comments of the U.S. Dep't of Justice, Notice of Petition
for Waiver of the Terms of the Order Limiting Scheduled Operations
at LaGuardia Airport, Fed'l Aviation Admin., FAA-2010-0109, March
24, 2010 at A-2 (finding an ``economically significant impact from
the presence of an LCC on nonstop route-level prices, ranging from
21% to 27% average price decreases and a 68% to 118% median increase
in number of passengers depending on the data examined'').
\13\ E.g., Jan K. Brueckner et al., Airline Competition and
Domestic U.S. Airfares: A Comprehensive Reappraisal, 2 Econ. Transp.
1-17 (2013) (finding that addition of nonstop LCC service reduces
fares by 12% to 33% while entry of nonstop legacy service reduces
fares by approximately 4%; similarly, the presence of LCC connecting
service lowers fares by as much as 12%, while additional legacy
connecting service lowers fares by typically less than 3%);
Phillippe Alepin et al., Segmented Competition in Airlines: The
Changing Roles of Low-Cost and Legacy Carriers in Fare
Determination, (working paper), available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2212860 (finding that the addition of
nonstop LCC service on a route reduces fares by approximately 24%
and the addition of a second nonstop LCC further reduces fares by
approximately 13%); see also Martin Dresner et al., The Impact of
Low Cost Carriers on Airport and Route Competition, 30 J. of Transp.
Econ. & Pol'y 309-328 (1996); Steven A. Morrison, Actual, Adjacent,
and Potential Competition: Estimating the Full Effect of Southwest
Airlines, 35 J. of Transp. Econ. & Pol'y 239-256 (2001).
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These substantial consumer benefits have proved particularly
meaningful when LCCs are able to gain access to slot-constrained
airports. For example, in 2010, Southwest acquired 36 slots at Newark
Liberty International Airport pursuant to a divestiture remedy that
addressed competition concerns arising from the merger of United
Airlines and Continental Airlines. Southwest used those slots to enter
six nonstop routes from Newark (one of which, Newark-BWI, it later
exited), resulting in substantially lower fares to consumers and
increased output:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year-over-year Year-over-year
Route percentage change in percentage change in
average fare number of passengers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Newark-St. Louis.............................................. -27 66
Newark-Houston................................................ -15 53
Newark-Phoenix................................................ -14 57
Newark-Chicago................................................ -11 35
Newark-Denver................................................. -5 49
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Passengers flying on these five nonstop routes after Southwest
began service saved about $75 million annually compared to what they
would have had to pay prior to Southwest's entry.\14\ In addition,
Southwest was able to incorporate Newark service into its overall
domestic network, offering low fares on connections to Newark from over
sixty cities.\15\ In this way, the creation of only a few nonstop
routes led to 60 connecting routes. A similar multiplier effect is
expected with the current divestitures.
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\14\ USDOT Origin & Destination Survey. Percentage changes in
average fare and number of passengers are calculated using data from
the first full quarter after entry by Southwest and, as a baseline,
data from four quarters before that entry. To determine annual
consumer savings, the number of passengers flying on each route for
each of the four quarters following Southwest's entry is multiplied
by the dollar amount of the corresponding year-to-year fare change
for that quarter. The annual amount is the sum of the four quarters
for all of the routes. Data is not reported for the Newark-BWI
route.
\15\ USDOT Origin & Destination Survey, CY 2012.
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Likewise, JetBlue used its limited number of slots at Reagan
National to drive down fares and increase output on the routes it
serves. For example, after JetBlue entered the Reagan National to
Boston route in 2010, average fares dropped by 39 percent year-over-
year and passengers nearly doubled. US Airways estimated that after
JetBlue's entry, the last-minute fare for round-trip travel between
Reagan National and Boston--a key business route--dropped by over $700.
See Am. Compl. ] 88.
[[Page 14283]]
b. The Importance of the Remedy Assets to Enhancing LCC Competition
The proposed settlement significantly eases some of the most
intractable barriers to LCC entry and expansion throughout the country.
First and foremost, the remedy provides unprecedented access to Reagan
National and LaGuardia, two of the most strategically important--and
most constrained--airports highly preferred by business passengers. The
legacy carriers have long dominated these airports and meaningful entry
by LCCs has been notoriously difficult. At Reagan National, where LCCs
had only about six percent of the take-offs and landings prior to the
divestitures, the remedy transfers twelve percent of the slots to LCCs,
nearly tripling LCC presence there. Likewise, the remedy will extend
access at LaGuardia, where LCCs hold less than 10 percent of the slots.
The LCCs that are acquiring the divested slots will be able to offer
through their use of the divested slots over four million seats per
year at Reagan National and over 1.5 million seats per year at
LaGuardia.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Annual seats calculations are based on the number of
divested daily slots at each airport and the average number of seats
on the aircraft that the slot acquirers typically use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indeed, the transfer of Reagan National slots to LCCs will produce
an immediate benefit to consumers in the form of increased capacity
because LCCs are likely to use larger planes than US Airways had
used.\17\ Comparing the average aircraft size operated by US Airways on
routes it has announced it will exit with the average aircraft size
operated by Southwest and JetBlue at Reagan National in 2013, the
number of seats at Reagan National is estimated to increase by over 2
million per year as a direct result of transferring the slots to LCCs,
leading to a potential 10% increase in the number of passengers using
the airport.\18\
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\17\ A large proportion of US Airways' Reagan National flights
have in recent years been on small regional jets, even though it had
sufficient flexibility with its slot portfolio to use larger
aircraft. Absent the remedy, the merged airline would have had two-
thirds of the flights at Reagan National but only half the airport's
passengers. Hearing on Airline Industry Consolidation Before the
Subcomm. on Aviation Operations, Saftey and Security of the S Comm.
on Commerce, Science and Transportation (June 19, 2013) 113 Cong.
(statement of W. Douglas Parker, Chairman and CEO, US Airways
Group).
\18\ The average aircraft US Airways operated in 2013 on the 16
routes that it plans to exit had 57.6 seats; Southwest and JetBlue
operate aircraft with an average of 123.1 seats. Official Airline
Guide. (The aircraft size on US Airways's current Reagan National-
San Diego service is excluded because that service will simply shift
to Reagan National-LAX.)
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And, for the first time ever, an LCC (Southwest) will be able to
offer a wide array of flight options for nonstop and connecting service
from Reagan National to points throughout its network, with resulting
consumer benefits that, given the large number of slots at issue, are
likely to significantly exceed those that occurred after its entry at
Newark. Although Southwest has not yet announced which cities it will
serve with the 56 slots it purchased through the divestitures, it will
likely have the flexibility to add as many as six to eight new routes
to its existing seven Reagan National routes.\19\ The addition of each
new route will create new connecting service to many more points
throughout the country.\20\
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\19\ Carriers typically schedule between three (in small
markets) and 10 (in large markets) daily round trips when
establishing a new route.
\20\ If Southwest were to institute nonstop service between
Reagan National and, for example, Chicago's Midway Airport
(Southwest's top airport in terms of departures), it would
simultaneously create convenient one-stop service between Reagan
National and over 55 additional airports that Southwest serves from
Midway.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given that New American's slot holdings at Reagan National will
allow it to continue to serve an extensive list of destinations, nearly
anywhere Southwest, JetBlue or Virgin America choose to fly with their
newly-acquired slots will provide direct competition with New
American.\21\ The remedy also has ensured that JetBlue will retain
permanent access to the sixteen slots it formerly leased from American.
JetBlue uses these slots to serve routes on which it competes directly
with US Airways (and now New American). One of the harms alleged from
the merger was the likelihood that New American would have cancelled
the lease to eliminate that competition.\22\
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\21\ For example, JetBlue has announced that it will add three
additional routes with twelve of the twenty-four new Reagan National
slots it has acquired. Two (Charleston, SC and Hartford, CT) will
add a competitor to routes that would otherwise only be served by
New American from Reagan National, and the other (Nassau, Bahamas)
will add LCC service on a route New American has announced it will
exit. See Press Release, JetBlue, ``JetBlue Adds Three Nonstop
Destinations for Customers at Ronald Reagan Washington National
Airport, Offers Introductory One-Way Fares as Low as $30'' (Mar. 6,
2014), available at https://investor.jetblue.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=131045&p=irol-NewsArticle.
\22\ See Am. Compl. ]] 87-88.
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Similarly, gate divestitures at O'Hare, Los Angeles (LAX), Boston,
Dallas Love Field, and Miami will expand the presence of LCCs at these
strategically important airports located throughout the country. The
acquirers will be able to offer increased competition not just on
nonstop flights to and from these key airports, but also on connecting
flights nationwide. O'Hare and LAX, two of New American's major hubs,
are among the most highly congested airports in the country, and
competitors have historically had difficulties obtaining access to
gates and other facilities at those airports.\23\ Dallas Love Field is
much closer to downtown Dallas than American's largest hub at Dallas-
Fort Worth International Airport (``DFW''). Gates at DFW are readily
available, but Love Field is gate constrained. Although today's
operations at Love Field are severely restricted under current law,\24\
those restrictions are due to expire in October 2014, at which point
Love Field will have a distinct advantage over DFW in serving business
customers near downtown Dallas. The divestitures will position the
acquirer to provide vigorous competition to New American's nonstop and
connecting service out of DFW. And as there is limited ability to enter
or expand at Boston, the divestitures will provide relief there
too.\25\
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\23\ For example, Virgin America originally announced its intent
to serve O'Hare in 2008, but its plans were delayed over three years
due to a lack of gate availability. Press Release, Virgin America,
``Virgin America Breezes Into O'Hare'' (Feb. 17, 2011) (describing
long-term efforts to obtain gate access), available at https://www.virginamerica.com/press-release/2011/virgin-america-breezes-into-chicago-ohare.html. The comments submitted by Allegiant
Airlines demonstrate the importance to LCCs of obtaining gates at
LAX.
\24\ Under legislation known as the Wright Amendment, airlines
operating out of Love Field may not operate nonstop service on
aircraft with more than 56 seats to any points beyond Texas, New
Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri
or Alabama.
\25\ Although access issues at Miami are not as acute as at the
other airports, the proposed Final Judgment also ensures that a
carrier seeking to enter or expand at Miami will have access to two
of the gates and associated ground facilities currently leased by US
Airways.
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Importantly, the consumer benefits of opening access to these key
constrained airports will extend beyond the passengers directly served
at those seven airports. Given the importance of the airports to
business travelers, the LCCs that are acquiring the slots and gates
will have a more robust product for business and corporate travel. For
example, as a result of the divestitures, Virgin America--one of only a
few airlines to start domestic service in recent years--will enter
LaGuardia, expand at Reagan National, and may expand at other
constrained airports as the gate divestitures progress. As such, it
will supplement its West Coast presence with service to major East
Coast business destinations (and potentially additional destinations
around the country), thereby establishing greater scope and scale.\26\
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\26\ Virgin America has announced its interest in beginning
service from Love Field to major business destinations throughout
the country. Press Release, Virgin America, ``Virgin America Plans
Dallas Expansion: Airline wants to bring more business-friendly,
low-fare flight competition to Dallas with new flights from Love
Field,'' available at https://www.virginamerica.com/press-release/2014/virgin-america-plans-dallas-expansion.html.
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[[Page 14284]]
Moreover, the passenger demand generated in cities where the
divestitures will occur will enhance the LCCs' incentives to invest in
new capacity elsewhere. For example, if Southwest were to add nonstop
service from Reagan National to Nashville, the new source of passengers
from the major population center of Washington, DC, could support entry
or expansion on additional routes out of Nashville. At the same time,
Southwest's marketing position in Nashville would be enhanced because
the nation's capital is included in the service offerings available in
Nashville.\27\ That would in turn make it easier for Southwest to
attract passengers to its other destinations and incentivize Southwest
to add capacity to meet that demand.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ As Southwest's CEO stated, ``We have a lot of customers
that love Southwest Airlines . . . and a lot of them want to go to
Reagan.'' Charisse Jones, ``JetBlue, Southwest Gain Slots at Reagan
Airport,'' USA Today (Jan. 30, 2014), available at https://usat.ly/1b9U3ah.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thus, taken together, the divestitures will substantially improve
the LCCs' network quality and attractiveness to customers, position
them to offer more meaningful competition system-wide, and enable them
to grow faster than they otherwise would, both in the depth and breadth
of their networks.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ We are not suggesting that this remedy eliminates all entry
barriers faced by LCCs. As alleged in the Complaint, airlines
(including LCCs) face entry impediments, particularly where the
origin or destination airport is another airline's hub. Am. Compl. ]
91. However, LCCs have demonstrated some ability to overcome those
disadvantages with the help of lower costs, and we expect that the
network-wide strengthening brought about by the divestitures will,
over time, help the LCCs overcome some of the other obstacles that
limit their ability to expand.
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III. Standard of Judicial Review
The APPA requires that proposed consent judgments in antitrust
cases brought by the United States be subject to a sixty-day public
comment period, after which the court shall determine whether entry of
the proposed Final Judgment ``is in the public interest.'' 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 16(e)(1). In making that determination, the court, in accordance
with the statute as amended in 2004, is required to consider:
(A) the competitive impact of such judgment, including termination
of alleged violations, provisions for enforcement and modification,
duration of relief sought, anticipated effects of alternative remedies
actually considered, whether its terms are ambiguous, and any other
competitive considerations bearing upon the adequacy of such judgment
that the court deems necessary to a determination of whether the
consent judgment is in the public interest; and
(B) the impact of entry of such judgment upon competition in the
relevant market or markets, upon the public generally and individuals
alleging specific injury from the violations set forth in the complaint
including consideration of the public benefit, if any, to be derived
from a determination of the issues at trial.
15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(1). In considering these statutory factors, the
court's inquiry is necessarily a limited one as the government is
entitled to ``broad discretion to settle with the defendant within the
reaches of the public interest.'' United States v. Microsoft Corp., 56
F.3d 1448, 1461 (D.C. Cir. 1995); see also United States v. SBC
Commc'ns, Inc., 489 F. Supp. 2d 1 (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing public
interest standard under the Tunney Act); United States v. InBev N.V./
S.A., 2009-2 Trade Cas. (CCH) ] 76,736, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787,
No. 08-1965 (JR) at *3 (D.D.C. Aug. 11, 2009) (discussing nature of
review of consent judgment under the Tunney Act; inquiry is limited to
``whether the government's determination that the proposed remedies
will cure the antitrust violations alleged in the complaint was
reasonable, and whether the mechanisms to enforce the final judgment
are clear and manageable'').
Under the APPA a court considers, among other things, the
relationship between the remedy secured and the specific allegations
set forth in the Complaint, whether the decree is sufficiently clear,
whether the enforcement mechanisms are sufficient, and whether the
decree may positively harm third parties. See Microsoft, 56 F.3d at
1458-62. With respect to the adequacy of the relief secured by the
decree, a court may not ``engage in an unrestricted evaluation of what
relief would best serve the public.'' United States v. BNS, Inc., 858
F.2d 456, 462 (9th Cir. 1988) (citing United States v. Bechtel Corp.,
648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th Cir. 1981)). Instead,
[t]he balancing of competing social and political interests
affected by a proposed antitrust consent decree must be left, in the
first instance, to the discretion of the Attorney General. The court's
role in protecting the public interest is one of insuring that the
government has not breached its duty to the public in consenting to the
decree. The court is required to determine not whether a particular
decree is the one that will best serve society, but whether the
settlement in ``within the reaches of the public interest.'' More
elaborate requirements might undermine the effectiveness of antitrust
enforcement by consent decree.
Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
In determining whether a proposed settlement is in the public
interest, the government is entitled to deference as to its
``predictions as to the effect of the proposed remedies.'' Microsoft,
56 F.3d at 1461; see also SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17
(explaining that district court ``must accord deference to the
government's predictions about the efficacy of its remedies''); United
States v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., 272 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C.
2003) (noting that the court should grant due respect to the United
States' ``prediction as to the effect of the proposed remedies, its
perception of the market structure, and its views of the nature of the
case''); United States v. Morgan Stanley, 881 F. Supp. 2d 563, 567
(S.D.N.Y. 2012) (government entitled to deference).
Courts ``may not require that the remedies perfectly match the
alleged violations.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17. Rather, the
ultimate question is whether ``the remedies [obtained in the decree
are] so inconsonant with the allegations charged as to fall outside of
the `reaches of the public interest.' '' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461.
Accordingly, the United States ``need only provide a factual basis for
concluding that the settlements are reasonably adequate remedies for
the alleged harms.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17. And, a
``proposed decree must be approved even if it falls short of the remedy
the court would impose on its own, as long as it falls within the range
of acceptability or is within the reaches of the public interest.''
United States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F. Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C.
1982) (citations and internal quotations omitted); see also United
States v. Alcan Aluminum Ltd., 605 F. Supp. 619, 622 (W.D. Ky. 1985)
(approving the consent decree even though the court would have imposed
a greater remedy).
In its 2004 amendments to the Tunney Act,\29\ Congress made clear
its
[[Page 14285]]
intent to preserve the practical benefits of using consent decrees in
antitrust enforcement, adding the unambiguous instruction that
``[n]othing in this section shall be construed to require the court to
conduct an evidentiary hearing or to require the court to permit anyone
to intervene.'' 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(2). The procedure for the public-
interest determination is left to the discretion of the court, with the
recognition that the court's ``scope of review remains sharply
proscribed by precedent and the nature of the Tunney Act proceedings.''
SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11; see also United States v. Enova
Corp., 107 F. Supp. 2d 10, 17 (D.D.C. 2000) (``[T]he Tunney Act
expressly allows the court to make its public interest determination on
the basis of the competitive impact statement and response to public
comments alone.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ The 2004 amendments substituted ``shall'' for ``may'' in
directing relevant factors for courts to consider and amended the
list of factors to focus on competitive considerations and to
address potentially ambiguous judgment terms. Compare 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(1) (2006); see also
SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11 (concluding that the 2004
amendments ``effected minimal changes'' to Tunney Act review).
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IV. Public Comments and the United States' Response
The United States received fourteen public comments.\30\ The
comments have been posted on the Web site of the Antitrust Division
pursuant to the Court's November 20, 2013 Order. The comments are
summarized below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ As discussed, supra n.1, the United States also received
fifteen individual emails about the merger or settlement that were
sent using various channels outside of the designated procedures for
submitting Tunney Act comments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Delta Air Lines filed comments that argue that the
Complaint mischaracterizes airline competition and overstates the
potential harm from the merger. Delta asserts that the legacy airlines
do not engage in oligopolistic pricing; instead, according to Delta,
they compete vigorously with one another. Delta also argues that
divestiture of Reagan National slots exclusively to LCCs would be
harmful to consumers because LCCs would serve large, leisure-oriented
markets instead of the small- and medium-sized communities that Delta
states it would be more likely to serve. Thus, Delta argues that it
should not be precluded from acquiring Reagan National divestiture
slots. Delta also makes similar arguments with respect to the two
American gates at Dallas Love Field, where Delta currently operates
limited service by sub-leasing one of American's gates. It claims that
divesting those gates to an LCC would harm Dallas-area passengers by
depriving them of Delta's network service.
Senator John D. Rockefeller IV, Senator John Thune,
Congressman Bill Shuster, and Congressman Nick J. Rahall II submitted a
joint letter expressing their concerns that ``the proposed Final
Judgment would negatively impact competition for airline service to
small communities and rural areas.'' While acknowledging that providing
additional slots and gates to LCCs is likely to increase competition on
certain routes, they express concern that existing service to smaller
communities would not be protected. They urge the DOJ to allow all
carriers to bid for the divested slots and gates, arguing that LCCs
would be unlikely to use those assets to serve small communities.
Senator Thune wrote separately to reiterate the concerns expressed in
the joint letter, noting that Southwest's recent announcement to cease
service at the three smaller airports of Jackson, Mississippi; Branson,
Missouri; and Key West, Florida demonstrates that Southwest and other
LCCs are not interested in serving smaller markets.
Six commenters generally oppose the settlement on grounds
that it fails to remedy harms that were alleged in the Complaint,\31\
or additional harms that the commenters foresee from the
transaction.\32\ These comments urge that the settlement should be
rejected and the merger enjoined. The commenters generally assert or
presume that the United States would succeed at trial in obtaining all
relief sought in its Complaint (e.g., Bellemare Cmts. at 8; Messina/
Alioto Cmts. at 4-5), and take the position that new LCC entry fostered
by the divestitures will not be significant in comparison to the
alleged harm and will not remedy the loss of competition in all of the
city-pair markets that might be affected by the merger. Two commenters
contend that the settlement violates a ``rule'' that ``anticompetitive
effects in one market may not be justified by pro-competitive benefits
in another market.'' AAI Cmts. at 11; Consumers Union Cmts. at 2. In
addition to challenging the adequacy of the relief, two of the comments
suggest that the settlement resulted from improper influence (Messina/
Alioto Cmts. at 1-2; FlyersRights.org Cmts. at 1), and one argues that
the CIS contains insufficient economic analysis (Relpromax Cmts. at 1).
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\31\ Comments of The American Antitrust Institute (``AAI''),
joined by AirlinePassengers.org, Association for Airline Passenger
Rights, Business Travel Coalition, Consumer Travel Alliance, and
FlyersRights.org (``AAI Cmts.''); Comments of Mr. Daniel Martin
Bellemare; Comments of Mr. Carl Lundgren on behalf of Relpromax
Antitrust, Inc. (``Relpromax Cmts.''); Comments of the Consumers
Union; Comments of Mr. Howard Park.
\32\ Comments of Mr. Gil D. Messina and Mr. Joseph Alioto
(``Messina/Alioto Cmts.''). These commenters represent plaintiffs in
the Fjord v. AMR Corp. lawsuit challenging the merger discussed
supra n.4 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Wayne County, Michigan Airport Authority (``WCAA''),
operator of Detroit Metropolitan Airport (``DTW''), filed comments
stating that, ``[f]or the most part, it appears that the proposed
Settlement promotes [DOJ's] goals'' of fostering airline competition
and avoiding anti-competitive effects. It expresses concerns, however,
that the remedy will result in New American eliminating service on the
Reagan National-DTW route, leaving Delta as the only carrier on that
route. WCAA expresses its view that it is unlikely that any other
carrier will provide competing service. WCAA therefore requests that
the Final Judgment be modified to secure a commitment from New American
to continue to operate on the route or to mandate that acquirers of the
divested slots provide service to DTW. WCAA Cmts. at 2-5 & 7. WCAA also
filed Supplemental Comments stating that New American has announced its
intention to eliminate service on the Reagan National-DTW route.
In addition to joining the AAI Comments, the Consumer
Travel Alliance (``CTA'') and FlyersRights.org each submitted separate
comments. While noting that the proposed settlement ``is clearly an
attempt to preserve the same competition and comparison-shopping that
American consumers should enjoy,'' CTA argues that, if the merger goes
forward, DOJ should urge DOT to promote airline competition in three
areas: (1) disclosure of fees for ancillary products and services and
their distribution through all channels, (2) disclosure of all code-
shares, and (3) more limited grants by DOT of antitrust immunity for
alliance agreements between US and foreign airlines. CTA Cmts. at 2-4.
FlyersRights.org argues that the Court should ``require full disclosure
of settlement negotiations and lobbying and hold an evidentiary hearing
where passenger groups can be represented as interveners or amicus
parties.'' FlyerRights.org Cmts. at 2.
Allegiant Air, LLC (``Allegiant'') is an LCC interested in
expanding service to LAX, and it hopes to obtain access to the LAX
divestiture gates. Its comments express concern that even after New
American relinquishes claims to ``preferential use'' of the divested
gates, it may operate out of them on a ``common use'' basis, thereby
limiting LCC access. Allegiant requests that the Final Judgment be
clarified to make clear that American may not use the divested gates
even on a ``common use'' basis, and that DOJ work with the LAX airport
operator to ensure that LCCs have priority access to the gates.
Allegiant Cmts. at 2-4.
[[Page 14286]]
As several of the comments raise similar issues, we will address
the comments in five groupings: (1) whether the Complaint was
justified; (2) whether the remedy fully resolves the harms alleged in
the Complaint; (3) the effect of the remedy on service patterns at
Reagan National; (4) whether Delta is an appropriate divestiture
candidate; and (5) procedural issues relating to the proposed Final
Judgment and CIS as well as other miscellaneous concerns. Unless
otherwise noted, citations to specific comments merely are
representative of comments on that issue and are not an indication that
other comments were not considered.
A. Any Challenge to the Merits of the Complaint Is Beyond the Scope of
Tunney Act Review
Delta argues that one of the key theories of the United States'
case is simply wrong: it states that the allegations in the Complaint
regarding competitive harm from coordination among the legacy carriers
on capacity, fares and fees are unfounded. Delta asserts that the
legacy carriers vigorously compete against each other on price and
product quality, and it points to low margins in the industry as
evidence that the legacy airlines do not coordinate.\33\ Given its
claims that the airline industry is highly competitive and that the
legacy carriers do not coordinate, Delta appears to be arguing that the
United States' challenge to the American/US Airways merger was
fundamentally flawed, such that the merger should have been approved
unconditionally.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Delta argues that the low rate of return on investment in
the airline industry relative to other industries over the past ten
years ``disproves'' that there is a history of coordinated conduct
among the legacy carriers. Delta Cmts at 12-15. The airline industry
has suffered at times from poor financial performance (although
recent record earnings by a number of carriers suggest that this
history may not reflect current industry conditions). But there is
no basis in law or economics to conclude that coordinated conduct
cannot occur in the presence of financial distress. Firms may be
especially tempted to coordinate when they are facing tough economic
times. See Carl Shapiro, Competition Policy in Distressed
Industries, Remarks as Prepared for Delivery to ABA Antitrust
Symposium: Competition as Public Policy, May 13, 2009, 7-8 available
at https://www.justice.gov/atr/public/speeches/245857.pdf.
\34\ See Delta Cmts. at 9 (``The Government's case for blocking
the transaction between [American] and [US Airways] was predicated
in significant part on three fallacies about competition in the
industry.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The United States ``need not prove its underlying allegations in a
Tunney Act proceeding.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 20. Indeed,
challenges to the validity of the United States' case, or alleging that
it should not have been brought, are challenges to the initial exercise
of the United States' prosecutorial discretion and are outside the
scope of a Tunney Act proceeding. A Tunney Act proceeding is not an
opportunity for a ``de novo determination of facts and issues,'' but
rather ``to determine whether the Department of Justice's explanations
were reasonable under the circumstances'' because ``[t]he balancing of
competing social and political interests affected by a proposed
antitrust decree must be left, in the first instance, to the discretion
of the Attorney General.'' United States v. Western Elec. Co., 993 F.2d
1572, 1577 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (citations and internal quotation marks
omitted). Courts consistently have refused to consider ``contentions
going to the merits of the underlying claims and defenses.'' United
States v. Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th Cir. 1981). Thus,
Delta's challenge to the legitimacy of the United States' underlying
case is beyond the purview of Tunney Act review.
Nevertheless, the United States notes in response to this comment
that the merger raised serious competition issues and that the
Complaint provides specific allegations of competitive effects arising
from the transaction, particularly with respect to coordination among
the legacy carriers (including Delta), that fully justified the filing
of this action. See infra Sec. IV.D.
B. The Proposed Settlement Will Counteract Competitive Harm From the
Merger by Enhancing LCC Competition
Several commenters maintain that the proposed remedy fails to
resolve fully the harms alleged in the Complaint.\35\ These commenters
point to the extensive harm alleged in the Complaint and assert that
the new LCC entry fostered by the divestitures will not neutralize all
of the competitive losses in all of the city pair markets that might be
affected by the merger. The following discussion responds to
commenters' contentions that LCCs will not offer meaningful competition
and that the remedy does not perfectly match the allegations of harm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See, e.g., AAI Cmts. at 12 (``At bottom, the Department's
settlement does not adequately remedy the harms alleged in the
government's complaint.''); Messina/Alioto Cmts. at 7 (``[T]he
proposed settlement does not address the central concerns raised by
the DOJ's complaint.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. LCCs Provide Meaningful Competition
Several commenters question the sufficiency of the competition that
LCCs--and in particular Southwest--will offer as a result of the
remedy. As a general response to this point, substantial evidence
supports the conclusion of the United States that LCC competition is
effective and that providing slots and gates to enable LCCs to expand
their networks will have a significant pro-competitive effect. See
supra, Sec. II.B.
Delta argues specifically that LCCs are not significant competitors
for most passengers, especially business passengers. Delta adopts a
misleading term for LCCs--domestic leisure carriers or ``DLCs''--in an
attempt to paint an inaccurate picture of LCCs as only serving leisure
passengers, only serving large cities and dense routes, and only
providing no-frills service.\36\
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\36\ E.g., Delta Cmts. at 21 (``Given the limitations of their
business model, DLCs simply cannot and do not cater to travelers
beyond the most price-sensitive consumers seeking travel between
popular, often densely populated markets. Thus, divestitures to DLCs
will add little competition for time-sensitive passengers, for
business passengers, or for passengers traveling from small- to
medium-sized communities.'') (emphasis in original).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although LCCs' route networks are not as extensive as those of the
legacy carriers, it is simply not the case that LCCs single-mindedly
compete for leisure customers to the exclusion of business passengers,
or fly high-volume routes to the exclusion of serving smaller
communities. For example, Southwest, the largest LCC, has reported that
approximately 35% of its passengers are travelling on business and that
corporate sales are increasing.\37\ It serves numerous medium and small
communities, including Rochester, Grand Rapids, and Corpus Christi.
Moreover, a key part of Southwest's business model is to provide
frequent flights on its routes, a service attribute highly attractive
to business passengers. Similarly, JetBlue, although smaller than
Southwest, also serves small and medium communities--including
Richmond, Hartford, and Portland, Maine--and provides frequent service
on the business routes where it flies.\38\ On the Boston-Washington
route described in the Complaint--a classic business route--JetBlue has
ten daily frequencies and carries more passengers
[[Page 14287]]
than American, United and Delta combined.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Southwest Airlines Co., Q3 2013 Earnings Conference Call,
Corrected Transcript 13 (Oct. 24, 2013). Southwest's Chief Marketing
Officer recently explained: ``A lot of people view Southwest as a
leisure carrier because of our low fares, but our DNA is about being
a business airline.'' Jennifer Rooney, Southwest Airlines CMO Kevin
Krone Explains What's Behind The New Grown-Up Ads, Forbes.com, Apr.
22, 2012, available at https://onforb.es/11Fqy7v.
\38\ For example, JetBlue serves JFK-Buffalo with nine flights
per day and JFK-Boston with seven flights per day. These routes are
generally characterized as business, not leisure, markets.
\39\ While JetBlue was historically oriented to leisure traffic,
in recent years it has ``increased [its] relevance to the business
customer, particularly in Boston'' where it is the largest carrier.
JetBlue Corp., Annual Report (Form 10-K) at 8 (Feb. 20, 2013).
JetBlue's CEO stated that 20% of its overall customers--and 30% of
its Boston customers--are business passengers. JetBlue, Q4-2011
Earnings Conference Call Transcript (Jan. 26, 2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is also not the case that LCCs offer only basic, no-frills
service that is unattractive to business passengers. In some cases,
LCCs have actually been at the forefront in adding amenities designed
to attract business customers. JetBlue's service has proved
particularly appealing to Boston business travelers.\40\ It recently
introduced lie-flat seats and other amenities on certain trans-
continental flights to appeal to premium customers.\41\ Virgin America
also caters to business passengers, billing its flights to corporate
travel customers as ``your corner office in the sky.'' \42\ Virgin
America was the first domestic airline to offer fleetwide WiFi, and its
premium class service has been named the best among domestic airlines
in an annual poll of business travelers for several years in a row
(Delta was fifth in the most recent poll).\43\ Southwest and the other
LCCs have also been upgrading their in-flight amenities to better
attract business passengers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ One Boston-based business flyer told the Wall Street
Journal: ``The word spread pretty quickly around here: [JetBlue] had
service and nice planes. . . . A lot of people in the business
community prefer it. The fares are very competitive.'' Susan Carey,
How JetBlue Cracked Boston, Wall St. J. (Feb. 8, 2012) available at
https://on.wsj.com/xHdvX4.
\41\ Press Release, JetBlue, JetBlue Introduces
MintTM: The Best Coast-to-Coast Premium Service at an
Unbelievably unPremium Price (Sept. 30, 2013) https://investor.jetblue.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=131045&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1859952. JetBlue has also upgraded its standard
product to include in-flight wi-fi and DirecTV. JetBlue was the
first airline to offer DirecTV free of charge at every seat.
\42\ See, e.g., Corporate Travel, VirginAmerica.com, https://www.virginamerica.com/corporate-travel.html.
\43\ The Best Airlines and Hotels for Business Travelers,
cntraveler.com https://cntrvlr.com/1890tST (Oct. 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, while Delta minimizes the competitive significance of
LCCs in its comments, it has acknowledged in other settings the
significant competitive effect that LCCs exert, stating in its most
recent annual report that carriers such as Southwest, JetBlue, Spirit
and Allegiant ``have placed significant competitive pressure on us in
the United States and on other network carriers in the domestic
market.'' Delta Air Lines, Inc., Annual Report (Form 10-K) 17 (Feb. 21,
2014). The other legacy carriers likewise attest to the significance of
LCC competition.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See American Airlines Group, Inc., Annual Report (Form 10-
K) 26 (Feb. 27, 2014) (``Low-cost carriers have a profound impact on
industry revenues. . . . [LCCs] are expected to continue to increase
their market share through growth and, potentially, consolidation,
and could continue to have an impact on our overall performance.'');
United Continental Holdings, Inc., Annual Report (Form 10-K) 19
(Feb. 25, 2013) (``The increased market presence of low-cost
carriers, which engage in substantial price discounting, has
diminished the ability of large network carriers to achieve
sustained profitability on domestic and international routes.''); US
Airways Group, Inc., Annual Report (Form 10-K) 10 (Feb. 20, 2013)
(``[R]ecent years have seen the growth of low-fare, low-cost
competitors in many of the markets in which we operate. These
competitors include Southwest, JetBlue, Allegiant, Frontier, Virgin
America and Spirit. These low cost carriers generally have lower
cost structures than US Airways.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AAI questions the competitive significance and long-term impact of
Southwest's entry on fares and service. However, the actual examples of
the effects of LCC entry at slot-constrained airports discussed above
(supra Sec. II.B.2.a) provide compelling evidence of the importance of
LCC competition. While AAI casts doubt on the long-term impact of
Southwest's entry on the Newark routes,\45\ the average fare for the
five Newark routes over the three years since Southwest's entry has
decreased compared to pre-entry levels and has decreased 17% relative
to changes in national average fares during this period.\46\ In other
words, relative to the trend in nationwide air fares, consumers in
those five Newark routes have enjoyed significantly lower fares since
Southwest's entry. Moreover, Southwest has grown at the destination
cities served out of Newark, demonstrating the additional
procompetitive impact that can arise from opening slot-constrained
airports to LCCs.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ AAI Cmts. at 8 & n.15. AAI further states that ``[r]ecent
empirical studies suggest that the `Southwest effect' has
significantly petered out.'' Id. at 8 & n.16. AAI fails to note that
the principal study it cites, Michael D. Wittman & William S.
Swelbar, Evolving Trends of U.S. Domestic Airfares: The Impacts of
Competition, Consolidation and Low-Cost Carriers (MIT Int'l Ctr. For
Air Transp., Report No. ICAT-2013-07, Aug. 2013), found that ``the
presence of an LCC like Southwest, JetBlue, Allegiant, or Spirit is
associated with a decrease in average one-way fare of between $15-
$36,'' with the 2012 ``Southwest effect'' constituting a $17 average
decrease in fares. Wittman at 20. Moreover, the true consumer
savings is even greater as the study did not account for the fact
that Southwest does not charge baggage fees.
\46\ The national airline ticket price is calculated using DOT
data, available at https://www.rita.dot.gov/bts/airfares/national/table. Newark market fare changes are calculated from USDOT Origin &
Destination Survey.
\47\ AAI dismisses this possibility by suggesting that it has
not occurred at the six cities in which Southwest began to serve
from Newark with slots it acquired in connection with the United-
Continental merger. AAI Cmts. at 8 n.17. However, AAI incorrectly
relies on departures by all airlines from these airports rather than
focusing on Southwest. In the three years since its entry into these
airports from Newark, Southwest has increased seats at these
airports by over 10%. (Seat changes are calculated from the Official
Airline Guide.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. The Remedy Adequately Addresses the Harms Alleged in the Complaint
Some commenters argue that the remedy is not in the public interest
in that it does not match the harms alleged in the Complaint. In
particular, they emphasize that the remedy does not provide for the
continuation of US Airways's Advantage Fare program or address each
city-pair route in which American and US Airways provided competing
service.\48\ As the United States acknowledged in the CIS, the proposed
remedy does not purport to replicate the precise form of competition
that will be lost as a result of the merger. Rather, it requires the
divestiture of significant assets at key airports to LCCs, a
divestiture that will result in the expansion of LCC competition across
the nation and the delivery of substantial consumer benefits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ AAI argues that the settlement violates an ``out-of-market
benefits rule'' and that ``anticompetitive benefits in one market
[cannot] be justified by precompetitive consequences in another.''
The ``rule'' that AAI points to relates to how a court can find a
Section 7 violation based on likely anticompetitive effects in one
market, notwithstanding evidence of likely benefits in other
markets. As explained above, however, the United States' concerns
with this transaction were broad in nature. There is no ``rule''
precluding a settlement that reasonably resolves broad competitive
issues even if it does not completely eliminate the possibility of
harm in some markets. Indeed, the Department has made clear that it
has prosecutorial discretion in considering out-of-market pro-
competitive benefits, see U.S. Dept. of Justice & Fed. Trade
Comm'n., Horizontal Merger Guidelines 30 n.14 (2010), available at
www.justice.gov/atr/public/guidelines/hmg-2010.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These procompetitive benefits compare favorably with--and in some
ways exceed--those afforded by preserving competition between US
Airways and American. For example, the benefits of LCC entry and
expansion enabled by the remedy will extend to a larger number of
passengers and deliver a greater overall benefit to consumers as
compared to the Advantage Fare program. The Advantage Fare program is
targeted at a narrow segment of passengers, namely, price-sensitive
business passengers who purchase less than fourteen days prior to
departure and are willing to take connecting instead of nonstop
service. As the Complaint noted, approximately 2.5 million roundtrip
passengers purchased Advantage Fare tickets in 2012, representing about
four percent of the approximately 62.5 million roundtrip passengers who
traveled on the routes
[[Page 14288]]
where Advantage Fares were offered that year.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Am. Compl. ] 58 & US DOT Origin & Destination Survey.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By comparison, we expect Southwest, JetBlue and Virgin America to
offer over four million seats per year--enough capacity for two million
roundtrip passengers--at Reagan National through their use of the
divested slots (which, as discussed above, is over two million more
seats than US Airways and American would likely have offered absent the
remedy). Similarly, we expect the acquirers of the LaGuardia slots to
offer over 1.5 million seats per year--750,000 roundtrips--through
their use of the divested slots at that airport, and millions of
additional passengers will benefit from the new LCC service resulting
from the airport gate divestitures. All of the passengers served by
LCCs as a result of the divestitures will benefit from lower fares, not
just the last-minute shoppers that were the primary focus of US
Airways's Advantage Fare program. Benefits will also extend to
passengers flying on legacy carriers on routes where the remedy injects
new LCC competition because the legacy carriers will likely lower their
prices in response to the new competition.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ See Kerry M. Tan, Incumbent Response to Entry by Low-Cost
Carriers in the U.S. Airline Industry, working paper (May 20, 2013),
https://ssrn.com/abstract=2006471; see also supra n.13 (listing
studies).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another source of harm alleged in the Complaint was the loss of
head-to-head competition between US Airways and American on city-pair
routes throughout the country. As set forth in the Complaint and
Appendix A, American and US Airways provided competing service on
seventeen nonstop routes and hundreds of connecting routes. Although
the remedy will not replicate the competition lost in each of these
routes, it will allow LCCs to launch more than seventeen new nonstop
routes and enter and expand service on connecting routes across the
country, almost all of which will be in competition with New American.
Travelers flying on these routes will likely benefit from substantial
savings because LCC competition typically has a much larger effect on
fares than legacy competition.\51\ While we do not know at this point
the specific routes the LCCs will enter using the divestiture assets
(and therefore cannot quantify likely effects), we can be confident
that the head-to-head competition the LCCs will provide will
substantially benefit millions of consumers nationwide.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ As described above, LCC entry on a route--whether by
nonstop or connecting service--can have as much as three times the
benefit on fares as that of entry by legacy carriers. See supra n.13
and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Despite these benefits, some commenters challenge the adequacy of
the proposed remedy because it does not eliminate the possibility of
harm on every route, pointing in particular to the fact that the United
States cited high concentration levels in approximately 1,000 city pair
markets in Appendix A of its Complaint. See, e.g., AAI Cmts. at 4. It
is well established, however, that courts ``must accord deference to
the government's predictions about the efficacy of its remedies, and
may not require that the remedies perfectly match the alleged
violation.'' SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17. As described above,
the United States' primary concerns with this transaction were broad in
nature and the proposed remedy reasonably addresses those broad
competitive issues even if it does not seek to precisely match harm on
a route-by-route basis.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Route-specific remedies are simply not feasible in this
case nor would they be desirable. Unlike in some other industries,
slot and other airport facilities necessary to serve air
transportation markets are generally not dedicated to a specific
market, but can be redeployed in different city-pair markets that
originate or terminate at the same airport. For example, a slot that
is currently used to serve Reagan National-Nashville could
alternatively be used to serve Reagan National-Hartford. Thus, it is
not possible to divest a route or a set of routes to a competing
carrier. The government could, in theory, impose behavioral rules
focused on protecting consumers in particular markets--e.g., setting
a cap on fares charged by New American, mandating that the merged
carrier employ an ``Advantage Fares'' type pricing program, or
requiring a buyer of divested gates to serve a particular route. But
those types of behavioral remedies would be exceedingly difficult to
craft, entail a high degree of risk of unintended consequences,
entangle the government and the Court in market operations, and
raise practical problems such as the need for ongoing government
monitoring and enforcement. Even a full-stop injunction of the
merger would not have guaranteed continued competition between the
merging airlines on specific routes, nor would it have afforded the
opportunity to obtain much of the relief that was made possible by
the settlement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Such comments also ignore the fact that there has been no finding
of liability in this case. Market concentration statistics are a
``useful indicator'' of the likely competitive effects of the
transaction, Am. Cmpl. ] 37, and can be used to establish a presumption
that a transaction is unlawful under Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
However, even if the United States were successful in establishing this
presumption, Defendants would have sought to rebut it by arguing that
the cited market concentration statistics (high HHIs) are not
indicative of competitive harm on all 1,000 routes, especially those
that already enjoy some LCC service or where one of the merging parties
had a relatively small share. Def. AMR Corp.'s Answer (Docket No. 80)
at 2-3. In essence, the significance of these market concentration
statistics would have been highly disputed at trial. While the United
States believes it would have prevailed on these issues at trial, the
settlement avoids the risk and uncertainty of further litigation for
all involved--factors that are appropriate for this Court to consider
when evaluating whether a proposed remedy is in the public interest.
See SBC Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 15 (``room must be made for the
government to grant concessions in the negotiation process for
settlements'').
The proposed remedy secures substantial benefits for millions of
American consumers and advances competition in ways that would not have
been possible even if the United States had prevailed at trial. SBC
Commc'ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 23 (``Success at trial was surely not
assured, so pursuit of that alternative may have resulted in no remedy
at all. While a trial may have created an even greater evidentiary
record, that benefit may not outweigh the possible loss of the
settlement remedies.''). Thus, giving deference to the government's
assessment, the proposed settlement is well within ``the reaches of the
public interest.''
C. The Remedy Does Not Mandate Changes in Service Patterns at Reagan
National
Several commenters expressed concerns that service patterns at
Reagan National could change as a result of the slot divestitures.\53\
New American has announced its intention to drop service from Reagan
National to certain destinations,\54\ and the purchasers of the slots
have not yet announced all of the new routes they intend to fly. Slots
are generally not designated for use in specific markets, and thus the
acquirers may make different choices about where to fly than US Airways
and American have made in the past. The United States was aware of the
potential impact on existing service when crafting the remedy and took
steps to ensure that the divestitures would not preclude New American
from using its approximately 500 remaining slots to continue to serve
any market it currently serves. While there may be some changes in
service at Reagan National in the immediate
[[Page 14289]]
aftermath of the divestitures, on balance, the competitive landscape at
the airport will be greatly improved as LCCs acquire the resources they
need to compete effectively across a broad range of routes.\55\ As
discussed above, the effect of the divestitures will be a significant
net increase in the number of seats operated at Reagan National.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See Delta Cmts. at 6-7; Rockefeller et al. Cmts. at 1; WCAA
Cmts. at 2.
\54\ Press Release, American Airlines, American Airlines to
Implement Network Changes as a Result of DOJ-Mandated Slot
Divestitures (Jan. 15, 2014), available at https://hub.aa.com/en/nr/pressrelease/american-airlines-to-implement-network-changes-as-a-result-of-doj-mandated-slot-divestitures.
\55\ The fact that a nonstop flight from Reagan National to a
particular city may be discontinued does not mean that passengers
from that city are unable to fly to Washington. As New American
stated in its press release announcing the nonstop routes it had
decided to cut, ``[c]ustomers in these communities will still have
access to DCA, which remains a key hub for American, through
connecting flights from one or more of the airline's other eight
hubs.'' Id.
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1. Background on Slot Regulation at Reagan National
In order to appreciate the competitive implications of the Reagan
National slots divestitures, it is important to understand the federal
regulation at the airport. Demand for access to Reagan National has
exceeded its capacity since before the airline industry was
deregulated. The FAA promulgated the first set of slot rules in 1969 in
order to manage the problem. The rule, known as the High Density Rule
(``HDR'') limited the number of landing and take-off slots available at
Reagan National and other congested airports.\56\ Since 1969, the FAA
and Congress have periodically revised the number of takeoffs and
landings permitted at the airports and made various changes to the slot
rules. Reagan National is also subject to a federally-imposed 1,250-
mile ``perimeter rule'' limiting the distance of nonstop flights to and
from the airport.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ High Density Traffic Airports, 14 C.F.R. Sec. 93.121-133.
Under the HDR, the FAA allocated slots to airlines based on their
existing operating schedules at the airports. Subject to the FAA's
``use or lose'' regulations and other conditions, the carriers were
essentially granted access to the slots in perpetuity, and had
permission to buy, sell, and trade them. The rules divided slots
into two categories: ``air carrier'' slots useable by any type of
aircraft, and ``commuter'' slots that are restricted to smaller
aircraft. The airports governed by the rule at the time were
LaGuardia, John F. Kennedy International, Newark Liberty
International, O'Hare and Reagan National. Although LaGuardia, JFK,
and Newark are still subject to slot controls, Reagan National is
the only airport governed by the HDR today.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many airlines consider flights to this airport to be a valuable
part of the service they offer to travelers. Yet, for decades, carriers
wishing to enter or expand at Reagan National have had problems
obtaining slots. After the FAA's initial allocation, a carrier wishing
to begin or expand service at Reagan National could theoretically buy
or lease slots from an airline that already owned them, but slots have
been offered for sale or trade infrequently. In April 2000, Congress
enacted the Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the
21st Century (``AIR-21'') which directed DOT to grant a limited number
of ``exemptions'' to the Reagan National slots rules in an attempt to
address these access problems, among other goals.\57\ The Act created a
limited number of exemptions for flights beyond the 1,250-mile
perimeter limit and for destinations within the perimeter.\58\ Unlike
slots, exemptions are granted to airlines for service on a particular
route, and the grantee airline generally cannot transfer an exemption
to another airline.\59\ Although exemptions have provided modest
improvements to the access problems that smaller carriers face at the
airport, the scarcity of slots is still a substantial barrier to entry.
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\57\ Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the
21st Century, 49 U.S.C. Sec. 41718, Pub. L. No. 106-181, 114 Stat.
61, 112-115 (2000). Through AIR-21, Congress established criteria
for DOT to use when granting ``within-perimeter'' exemptions that
reflect a balance of competition and other goals: ``[T]he Secretary
shall develop criteria for distributing slot exemptions for flights
within the perimeter to such airports under this paragraph in a
manner that promotes air transportation: (1) by new entrant air
carriers and limited incumbent air carriers; (2) to communities
without existing nonstop air transportation to Ronald Reagan
Washington National Airport; (3) to small communities; (4) that will
provide competitive nonstop air transportation on a monopoly nonstop
route to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport; or (5) that will
produce the maximum competitive benefits, including low fares.'' 49
U.S.C. Sec. 41718(b).
\58\ Many of the ``outside perimeter'' exemptions were granted
to legacy carriers.
\59\ 49 U.S.C. Sec. 41714(j). Two subsequent federal statutes,
enacted in 2003 and 2012, expanded the number of exemptions at DCA.
Vision 100-Century of Aviation Reauthorization Act (Vision 100),
Pub. L. No. 108-176 Sec. 425, 117 Stat. 2490, 2555 (2003) and the
FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012, Pub. L. No. 112-95 Sec.
414, 126 Stat. 11, 90 (2012).
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A major slots transaction substantially changed the distribution of
slot holdings at Reagan National in 2011. Pursuant to the ``US Airways-
Delta Slots Swap,'' Delta traded 84 slots (almost half of its Reagan
National slot holdings at the time) to US Airways in exchange for slots
at LaGuardia. DOT approved the transaction subject to, among other
remedies, the parties divesting 16 Reagan National slots to carriers
who held less than 5 percent of the slots at the airport, a group that
consisted exclusively of LCCs.\60\ Delta divested 16 of its remaining
slots to satisfy DOT's requirement.
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\60\ Petition for Waiver of the Terms of the Order Limiting
Scheduled Operations at LaGuardia Airport, 76 Fed. Reg. 63,702,
63,703 (October 13, 2011). The transaction required DOT review
because the rules governing LaGuardia prohibit permanent transfers
of slots without a waiver from DOT.
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Despite the efforts of Congress and DOT to ease access to Reagan
National, over 90 percent of the authorizations to take-off and land at
the airport remained in the hands of legacy carriers prior to this
merger remedy.\61\ The Reagan National slot divestitures pursuant to
the proposed Final Judgment resulted in the transfer of an
unprecedented 12 percent of the slots at the airport from legacy
carriers to low-cost carriers. As the LCCs begin to provide service
using the newly-acquired slots, the competitive landscape at Reagan
National will change significantly and benefit consumers in Washington,
DC and across the nation.
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\61\ A total of 808 daily slots and 64 daily exemptions have
been allocated to commercial airlines. New American would have held
69 percent of the slots post-merger, but as a result of the remedy,
its share will drop to 57 percent, which is comparable to US
Airways' pre-merger holdings. Delta holds 13 percent, and United
holds 9 percent. Post-divestitures, Southwest will hold 9 percent,
JetBlue will hold 7 percent, and Virgin America will hold 1 percent.
Other carriers at the airport include Air Canada, Alaska Airlines,
Frontier Airlines, and Sun Country Airlines, all with less than 2
percent. (Shares are based on July 2013 FAA slot holdings and
exemption data and do not reflect changes in slot holdings as the
result of Republic's recent sale of Frontier, which may prompt the
reallocation of a small number of slots.)
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2. Nothing in the Remedy Requires New American to Discontinue Service
to Particular Airports
Three commenters suggest that the proposed settlement will
negatively impact third parties. Members of Congress and Delta, on the
one hand, assert that service from Reagan National to certain small
communities currently served by US Airways will be eliminated as a
result of the divestitures.\62\ The operator of the Detroit Airport, on
the other hand, asserts that the large city of Detroit will lose a
competitor on the Reagan National-Detroit route, partly as a result of
measures that were taken to protect small communities. The United
States recognizes that the Court should consider the impact of the
settlement on third parties. Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1462 (``And,
certainly, if third parties contend that they would be positively
injured by the decree, a district judge might well hesitate before
assuming that the decree is appropriate.''). Here, however, the
settlement itself does not mandate that New American eliminate service
on any particular route, and in fact it ensures that New American will
retain enormous flexibility to determine which
[[Page 14290]]
routes it will serve with its remaining slots.
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\62\ Notably, none of the small communities allegedly affected
by the remedy filed comments, and several of them are located in
states that separately settled with the defendants.
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The proposed Final Judgment intentionally does not call for the
divestiture of any of US Airways's or American's ``commuter'' slots (a
total of about 150), which are particularly well-suited for service to
small communities given that they are limited to smaller-sized
aircraft. Instead, it calls only for divestiture of ``air carrier''
slots. This distinction was made to increase the likelihood that New
American's service to small and medium communities would be maintained.
Defendants' agreement with DOT, see supra n.11 and accompanying text,
also is designed to preserve service to small communities by requiring
New American to use its commuter slots at Reagan National to serve
medium and small airports.\63\
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\63\ Even in cases where third parties have property or contract
rights in the particular assets being divested, courts have approved
settlements where the decree contains ``provisions designed to
protect against undue harm.'' See United States v. Pearson plc, 55
F. Supp. 2d 43, 46-47 (D.D.C. 1999) (finding decree requiring
divestiture of certain textbook lines to be in public interest
notwithstanding claim by impacted author that his forthcoming book
would be negatively affected by divestiture). Although the
communities served from Reagan National do not have a property or
contract right to the slots that airlines use to provide such
service, the government has nevertheless structured the relief to
guard against potential undue disruptions to small communities.
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Moreover, New American will remain the largest holder of slots at
Reagan National, with over 50 percent of the total number at the
airport. Other than the commitments it has made to DOT with respect to
commuter slots, it will maintain complete flexibility to deploy its
slots in any way it sees fit.\64\ It will not be obligated to eliminate
service on any route. US Airways and Delta made this very point when
responding to DOT's concerns in connection with the US Airways-Delta
Slots Swap. DOT was concerned that as Delta and US Airways gave up
slots at Reagan National and LaGuardia, respectively, they would
eliminate service on particular routes where they competed against each
other. US Airways and Delta explained:
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\64\ It also seems likely that New American has sufficient
capacity to complete the divestitures and maintain service to most,
if not all, of the cities it currently serves simply by using its
slots more efficiently, e.g., by using larger aircraft and reducing
frequency on some of its routes. US Airways, in particular, has a
history of flying high-frequency, low-load factor, and often low-
capacity aircraft carrying a high percentage of connecting
passengers on a number of its Reagan National routes.
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Here, . . . Delta and US Airways are selling only some of their DCA
and LGA slots to each other and each will continue to be independent
competitors and retain substantial slots at both airports. The slots
each retains (and those each is selling) are not tied to any particular
city-pair. How the carriers decide to schedule their remaining slots is
completely within each carrier's unilateral discretion, and nothing in
this transaction obligates Delta or US Airways to stop competing on any
route.\65\
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\65\ Comments of Delta Air Lines, Inc. and US Airways, Inc. at
31, Federal Aviation Administration Notice of a Petition for Waiver
of the Terms of the Order Limiting Scheduled Operations at LaGuardia
Airport (2010) (Docket No. FAA-2010-0109), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=FAA-2010-010.
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In short, New American would be making a business decision as to
which routes it serves. An inherent feature of the airline industry,
and independent of any changes in slot holdings, is that airlines
reassess how to deploy their assets and enter and exit routes as they
seek to take advantage of profit opportunities. For example, in early
2013, US Airways stopped providing nonstop service between Reagan
National and Bentonville, Arkansas (XNA), a market it had entered only
five months earlier. Going back in time, US Airways exited a number of
markets it formerly served from Reagan National--e.g., Cleveland (CLE),
Houston (IAH), Chicago (ORD), and Atlanta (ATL)--despite not having
given up a single slot.\66\
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\66\ US Airways exited Cleveland in November 2005, Houston in
February 2006, O'Hare in July 2006, and Atlanta in October 2008.
Delta's route choices at Reagan National have been even more fluid.
It has eliminated service to cities such as Ft. Lauderdale (FLL),
Birmingham (BHM), Milwaukee (MKE), Lansing (LAN), Melbourne (MLB),
Baton Rouge (BTR), Raleigh/Durham (RDU), and Huntsville (HSV)--none
of which was prompted by the loss of slots. In March 2012, Delta
even chose to return a pair of exemptions that it had been granted
specifically for service on the Reagan National-Jackson, Mississippi
(JAN) route, rather than continuing to fly the route.
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It is not surprising that New American would make some changes to
its service patterns as a result of the merger, and indeed it has
announced that it will make some adjustments at Reagan National. It
recently announced that it would no longer operate ``year-round, daily
nonstop service to 17 destinations from DCA'' including large cities
such as San Diego, Minneapolis, and Detroit, and small communities such
as Jacksonville (NC) and Fort Walton Beach.\67\ US Airways had added
its Reagan National service to nearly all of these cities within the
last two years. But none of these cities were guaranteed nonstop US
Airways service in perpetuity. As time progressed, US Airways may well
have chosen to shift out of additional markets independently of the
merger.\68\
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\67\ American Airlines to Implement Network Changes as a Result
of DOJ-mandated Slot Divestitures, PR Newswire, Jan. 15, 2014,
available at https://hub.aa.com/en/nr/pressrelease/american-airlines-to-implement-network-changes-as-a-result-of-doj-mandated-slot-divestitures. The complete list includes Augusta, GA (AGS); Detroit,
MI (DTW); Fayetteville, NC (FAY); Fort Walton Beach, FL (VPS);
Islip, NY (ISP); Jacksonville, NC (OAJ); Little Rock, AR (LIT);
Minneapolis, MN (MSP); Montreal, Canada (YUL); Myrtle Beach, SC
(MYR); Nassau, Bahamas (NAS); Omaha, NE (OMA); Pensacola, FL (PNS);
San Diego, CA (SAN); Savannah, GA (SAV); Tallahassee, FL (TLH); and
Wilmington, NC (ILM).
\68\ And despite New American's claim that the changes were ``a
result of DOJ-mandated divestitures,'' some changes were clearly
independent of the divestitures--e.g., there is no possible
connection between the settlement and New American's decision to
exit Reagan National-San Diego, which was made possible through an
``out of perimeter'' slot exemption that New American will continue
to hold and use for additional service to LAX. The remedy did not
require divestiture of any exemptions, such as those needed to
provide service to LAX or San Diego. New American chose on its own
to stop serving San Diego in favor of increasing service to LAX.
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3. Mandating Service on Any Particular Route Is Unwarranted
Wayne County Airport Authority (``WCAA'') expressed its concern
that, following the divestitures, New American will eliminate service
on the Reagan National-Detroit route, leaving Delta as the only carrier
on the route. WCAA asserted that it is unlikely that any other carrier
will replace that lost competition, and that the settlement should be
revised to ensure that a second carrier commits to serving the
market.\69\ As explained above, the settlement itself does not require
New American to eliminate its existing service on any route, including
Reagan National-Detroit. Any modification that would restrict how
airlines use their assets would be likely to inhibit, not promote,
competition. One of the benefits of the proposed remedy is that LCCs
will, for the first time, have a meaningful ability to shift slots to
serve different routes as market conditions change. For example, if
prices increase on the Reagan National-Detroit route following New
American's exit, Southwest and JetBlue will now have sufficient slot
resources such that they could consider entering the market in the
future, even if they decide not to serve that route as an initial
matter. Such flexibility would be lost if slot holders were locked in
to serving particular routes.
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\69\ WCAA Cmts. at 5-7. Some may argue that the United States
should similarly preserve service to the other markets New American
has announced it will exit. Such a result, however, would raise the
same significant concerns with mandating service discussed above,
see supra, n.52.
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[[Page 14291]]
D. Delta Is Not an Appropriate Divestiture Candidate
Delta, while first arguing that the government's theory of
liability was flawed (supra Sec. IV.A), asserts that it should be
entitled to acquire a significant portion of the remedy assets, namely
slots at Reagan National and the two gates at Dallas Love Field.
Section IV.N. of the proposed Final Judgment requires that the assets
be divested to an acquirer or acquirers who in the judgment and sole
discretion of the United States ``will remedy the competitive harm
alleged in the Complaint.'' In response to Delta's request to acquire
assets, the United States considered all the facts and circumstances in
determining whether Delta should be considered an appropriate
divestiture candidate. The United States concluded that divesting
assets to Delta would fail to address the harm arising from the merger
and would be inconsistent with the goals that the remedy seeks to
achieve.
In cases involving allegations of coordinated effects arising from
a proposed merger, divestiture assets should not be acquired by firms
that are part of the oligopoly. As the Antitrust Division's Policy
Guide to Merger Remedies explains:
If the concern is one of coordinated effects among a small set of
post-merger competitors, divestiture to any firm in that set would
itself raise competitive issues. In that situation, the Division likely
would approve divestiture only to a firm outside that set. [FN: Indeed,
if harmful coordination is a concern because the merger is removing a
uniquely positioned maverick, the divestiture likely would have to be
to a firm with maverick-like interests and incentives.] \70\
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\70\ U.S. Dep't of Justice, Antitrust Div., Antitrust Division
Policy Guide to Merger Remedies 28 (2011) [hereinafter Remedies
Guide]; see also id. at 31 (``However, this concern is adequately
and more directly addressed by applying the fundamental test that
the proposed purchaser must not itself raise competitive
concerns.''). The same concepts appeared in the Antitrust Division's
2004 Policy Guide to Merger Remedies. See generally Phillip E.
Areeda and Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law: An Analysis of
Antitrust Principles and Their Application ] 990d (3rd ed. 2011 and
Supp. 2013) (discussing Remedies Guide).
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The Complaint describes oligopoly behavior by the legacy carriers
(including Delta), such as examples of legacy carriers ``respecting''
the nonstop prices of cooperating legacies but undercutting the nonstop
fares of US Airways in response to its Advantage Fares program and
tactics used to deter aggressive discounting and prevent fare wars.\71\
Delta's Comments ignore these specific allegations of coordinated
behavior.
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\71\ Am. Compl. ]] 48-54 (describing legacy carriers' response
to the Advantage Fares program) & ] 43 (describing ``cross-market
initiatives'' between Delta and US Airways).
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The allegations of coordination among the legacy carriers fully
justify the United States' discretionary decision to direct that the
divestiture assets be sold to firms that are unlikely to follow
industry consensus, in this case the LCCs. The goal of the divestiture
remedy is to enhance the ability of the LCCs to frustrate coordination
among the legacy carriers. Allowing Delta to acquire divestiture assets
would undermine the effectiveness of the remedy to accomplish this goal
and, given Delta's status as the second largest slot holder at Reagan
National, would exacerbate the slot concentration issues at that
airport.\72\
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\72\ See Remedies Guide, supra note 70, at 28 (``[I]f the
concern is that the merger will enhance an already dominant firm's
ability unilaterally to exercise market power, divestiture to
another large competitor in the market is not likely to be
acceptable, although divestiture to a fringe incumbent might.'').
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Delta further claims that an LCC-only divestiture of slots would be
``harmful to competition'' as Delta would be more likely than LCCs to
serve small- and medium-sized communities, including those communities
that New American is exiting. Delta Cmts. at 24-30. Delta's argument
ignores the substantial benefits of LCC competition, especially with
respect to entry at slot-constrained airports long dominated by legacy
carriers (see supra Sec. II.B.2.a). It also ignores the fact that LCCs
routinely serve small- and medium-sized communities; indeed, JetBlue
has already announced schedules for half of the twelve roundtrip
flights it will serve from Reagan National with its divested slots and
five of these six new flights will be to small- or medium-sized
communities, either to replace service that New American is exiting or
in competition with New American.\73\ Southwest is likely to serve many
more such cities when it announces its schedule at Reagan National.
Finally, Delta fails to note that none of the proposed markets it
claims it would serve with the additional forty-four slots it requests
(i.e., over 40% of the total number of Reagan National slots being
divested) corresponds to routes New American is exiting.\74\
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\73\ JetBlue will provide two flights a day to Charleston, SC
(small community, competing against New American), two to Hartford,
CT (medium community, competing against New American), and one to
Nassau, Bahamas (small community, New American is exiting). The
other flight announced so far will be to Tampa, Florida. JetBlue
expects to announce the remaining six flights later this year. Press
Release, JetBlue, ``JetBlue Adds Three Nonstop Destinations for
Customers at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Offers
Introductory One-Way Fares as Low as $30'' (Mar. 6, 2014), available
at https://investor.jetblue.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=131045&p=irol-NewsArticle.
\74\ Compare Delta Cmts. at 29 (listing proposed routes to
serve) with supra n.67 (listing cities American has announced it
will discontinue service from Reagan National).
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With respect to the divestiture of the Love Field gates, Delta
argues that ``no reasonable justification'' exists to favor LCCs over
Delta.\75\ Delta Cmts. at 30-34. But the point of the Love Field
divestiture is for an LCC to offer service at the airport that even
Delta recognizes is ``poised to become a highly attractive option for
business travelers from across the nation who will be drawn by its
proximity to the Dallas city center.'' Id. at 31. The acquirer of the
gates will be able to offer a compelling product to sought-after
business passengers who otherwise would favor New American's service
out of its hub at DFW. Obtaining access to Love Field will
significantly enhance the acquirer's ability to meaningfully compete
against New American, thereby furthering the overall goals of the
remedy. See supra Sec. II.B.2.b. In contrast, Delta, given its overall
size and scope as well as its presence at DFW, can and does challenge
New American for the business of corporate customers flying to and from
the Dallas area.
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\75\ Historically, the Wright Amendment restricted service from
Love Field to destinations in certain nearby states. In 2006,
Congress enacted the Wright Amendment Reform Act of 2006, under
which the perimeter restrictions will be removed effective October
13, 2014. However, that statute also ratified and effectuated an
agreement among American, Southwest and Dallas-Ft. Worth area
authorities that capped the number of gates at Love Field to twenty.
See The ``Five Party Agreement,'' (July 11, 2006) reproduced in S.
Rep. No. 109-317, at 4-15 (2006)). Southwest leases 16 of the Love
Field gates and American and United lease two each.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Delta also asserts that it is the only airline that can offer
business travelers at Love Field a network of domestic and
international destinations, but Delta's network offerings are not
unique at Love Field. United Airlines, which has access to two gates at
Love Field, offers a network of locations substantially similar to
Delta's. Delta also argues that only it offers a ``premium product''
that includes amenities such as a first-class cabin and ``Wi-Fi-
enabled'' aircraft, but it ignores the fact, as discussed above (supra
Sec. IV.B.1), that many LCCs offer, and were frequently pioneers in
offering, products and amenities that appeal to business travelers.\76\
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\76\ Delta also argues that it should obtain the Love Field
gates to prevent Southwest, which currently operates 16 of the 20
gates at Love Field, from becoming even more dominant at the
airport. As discussed in the CIS, providing a LCC with the
opportunity to differentiate itself from the large hub carrier in
Dallas should increase its competitive vigor and ability to grow.
CIS at 9-10. Delta incorrectly assumes that restricting eligible
bidders for the American gate interests would result in acquisition
by Southwest. At least one other LCC has expressed significant
interest. Press Release, Virgin America, ``Virgin America Plans
Dallas Expansion: Airline wants to bring more business-friendly,
low-fare flight competition to Dallas with new flights from Love
Field,'' available at https://www.virginamerica.com/press-release/2014/virgin-america-plans-dallas-expansion.html. The United States
will take all competitive factors into account when determining
which acquirer to approve.
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[[Page 14292]]
Finally, Delta's claim that it will be improperly evicted due to
the divestiture is similarly unavailing. Delta currently operates one
gate under a sub-lease from American that is terminable on thirty-days'
notice. (Another airline, Seaport, sub-leases the other American gate.)
But for the remedy, New American was likely to terminate the subleases
and operate the gates itself,\77\ an outcome that Delta surely
recognizes given the competitive value of the gates once the Wright
Amendment restrictions expire in October of this year. Delta,
therefore, never had a contractual (or other) right or expectation that
it would be able to remain at the American gate. The divestiture does
not change this fact.
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\77\ See Terry Maxon, The New American Airlines would have liked
to have used the Dallas Love Field gates, The Dallas Morning News
Airline Biz Blog (Jan. 28, 2014, 6:10 PM), https://aviationblog.dallasnews.com/2014/01/the-new-american-airlines-would-have-liked-to-have-used-the-dallas-love-field-gates.html/?nclick_check=1.
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In the end, the thrust of Delta's position is that its private
interests in obtaining divestiture assets should trump the remedial
goals of the proposed Final Judgment.\78\ Yet, no third party has a
right to demand that the Government exercise its discretion in
approving divestiture buyers to better serve the private interests of
that third party. While a court may inquire into the impact of the
settlement on third parties, it ``should not reject an otherwise
adequate remedy simply because a third party claims it could be better
treated.'' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 n.9.
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\78\ It is in Delta's interests to restrain the growth of LCCs,
as the more LCCs grow, the more likely it is that they will expand
offerings that compete with Delta. For example, as LCCs obtain more
slots at Reagan National, the more likely it will be that they will
initiate service on the highly-profitable ``hub routes'' that Delta
currently serves (such as Reagan National to Minneapolis or
Detroit). Such a result could significantly reduce fares and
profits, as occurred when JetBlue was able to compete against
USAirways on its Reagan National-Boston route, see Am. Compl. ] 88.
The fewer slots that are available to low-cost competitors, the less
likely it will be that a LCC will have sufficient slots to challenge
Delta in any of its lucrative Reagan National routes. The same
concept applies at Love Field, where the divestiture may allow an
LCC to offer highly competitive service to business passengers that
otherwise may have chosen Delta's service from DFW.
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E. Additional Concerns Raised by Commenters
1. Airline Consumer Disclosure and Alliance Issues Are Outside the
Scope of This Action
The Consumer Travel Alliance (``CTA'') recognizes that the PFJ
contains ``some good first steps'' to prevent harm from the merger, but
argues that the competitiveness of the airline industry is undermined
by the failure of the Department of Transportation to take action in
several areas: ``while DOJ is attempting to address the loss of airline
competition through settlement regarding this merger, the DOT
diminishes competition by not requiring truthful disclosure of airfares
and ancillary fees, deception created by code-sharing and the de facto
mergers spawned by DOT's liberal allowance of antitrust immunity.'' CTA
Cmts. at 2. It urges that the Department of Justice advocate to DOT
that it take action in these areas to increase disclosure requirements
and reduce the breadth of airline alliances. Similarly, Mr. Bellemare's
Comments appear to suggest that the Court should enjoin the proposed
merger so that the United States could seek the repeal of the
``regulatory barrier'' to entry posed by slot restrictions at Reagan
National and other airports. Bellemare Cmts. at 16.
As CTA appears to recognize, the problems it describes and the
remedies it proposes exist independently from this transaction, and are
outside the scope of the Tunney Act proceedings in this action. The
same is true of the entry constraints posed by the need to allocate the
limited resource of runway and airspace capacity at Reagan National and
the New York airports. With respect to the latter issue, the proposed
Final Judgment explicitly addresses the transaction's impact on slot
holdings and entry at slot-controlled airports. We note, moreover, that
the Department of Justice does regularly consult with DOT on a formal
and informal basis to preserve and advance airline competition.
2. The Proposed Final Judgment Precludes New American from Reacquiring
the Divested Gates at LAX; No Modification of the Decree Is Necessary
Allegiant, an LCC, submitted a comment on the divestiture of gates
at Los Angeles International Airport (``LAX''). Allegiant believes that
New American intends to attempt to gain access to the gates identified
in the proposed Final Judgment (31A and 31B) under the airport's common
use procedures,\79\ and that this would result in the gates not being
available for use by LCCs as intended by the proposed Final
Judgment.\80\ Allegiant requests that the Final Judgment be modified to
make clear that the prohibition on re-acquisition of divested assets
(Section XII) applies to use of gates on a common use basis. Allegiant
further submits that the United States should work with the relevant
airport authority, Los Angeles World Airports (``LAWA''), to ensure
that the gates be available to LCCs.
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\79\ Airport gates leased to a particular carrier on a
preferential use basis allow the leasing carrier to use the gate
subject to the airport authority's ability to provide access to
another airline if the gate is not being used by the lessor. The
airport authority often controls some ``common use'' gates and
allocates them to carriers on a per-use basis.
\80\ Allegiant's concern about this issue, which other LCCs have
also raised with the Department of Justice, demonstrates that there
is unmet demand for gates at LAX and that Delta's claim to the
contrary, Delta Cmts. at 31 n.50, is false.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As Allegiant correctly states, the purpose of the requirement that
Defendants divest two gates at LAX and the four other key airports is
to provide access to LCCs in order to allow them to expand their
networks. The intent of the decree is that there be two gates available
for LCC use beyond what would have existed but for the divestiture. The
gate divestiture can be accomplished either by Defendants sub-leasing
the gates to one or more LCCs on the same terms as Defendants lease the
gates or by Defendants turning the gates back to the airport ``to
enable the Acquirer to lease them from the airport operator.'' Section
IV.H. The decree also prohibits Defendants from re-acquiring ``any
interest'' in the divested assets. Section XII.
The divestiture process with respect to the key airport gates--
including those at LAX--has not yet begun.\81\ Nevertheless, the United
States has been in communication with LAWA concerning the issues raised
by the terms of the proposed Final Judgment.\82\ The United States
believes that the existing language in the proposed Final Judgment
prohibiting Defendants from taking any action to impede the
[[Page 14293]]
divestiture or re-acquiring ``any interest'' in the divested assets is
sufficient to prevent New American from using the airport's procedures
to block LCC access to the two gates. Accordingly, it is not necessary
to modify the proposed Final Judgment.
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\81\ Prior to the settlement agreement between the United States
and Defendants, US Airways was in the process of moving to Terminal
3 at LAX where the two gates subject to the decree are located. It
was originally intended that US Airways would occupy the gates under
a preferential use lease, but due to the settlement that lease has
not been executed and the two gates subject to the divestiture are
common use gates controlled by the airport.
\82\ Until the divestiture process is completed, the two gates
may be used by New American or any other carrier granted access
under the airport's common use rules.
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3. The CIS Fully Complies with Tunney Act Requirements
Relpromax argues that the Competitive Impact Statement (``CIS'') is
deficient and requests that the Court require the United States to
rewrite the CIS and resubmit it for public comment. Relpromax faults
the CIS for failing ``to provide substantive economic analysis.''
Relpromax Cmts. at 13. Although couched in terms of an alleged failure
by the United States to comply with the Tunney Act, Relpromax's
objections are in fact largely an objection to the proposed Final
Judgment itself. The CIS fully complies with the Tunney Act
requirements.
Congress enacted the Tunney Act, among other reasons, ``to
encourage additional comment and response by providing more adequate
notice [concerning a proposed consent judgment] to the public.'' S.
Rep. No. 93-298 at 5 (1973); H.R. Rep. No. 93-1463 at 7 (1974),
reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6535, 6538. The CIS is the primary means
by which Congress sought to provide more adequate notice to the public.
The Tunney Act requires that the CIS ``recite'':
(1) the nature and purpose of the proceeding;
(2) a description of the practices or events giving rise to the
alleged violations of the antitrust laws;
(3) an explanation of the proposal for a consent judgment,
including an explanation of any unusual circumstances giving rise to
such proposal or any provision contained therein, relief to be obtained
thereby, and the anticipated effects on competition of such relief;
(4) the remedies available to potential private plaintiffs damaged
by the alleged violation in the event that such proposal for a consent
judgment is entered in such proceeding;
(5) a description of the procedures available for modification of
such proposal; and
(6) a description and evaluation of alternatives to such proposal
actually considered by the United States.
15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(b).
There is no dispute that the CIS satisfies the requirements of the
Tunney Act with respect to items 1, 2, 4 and 5 listed above. Relpromax
asserts that the CIS fails to adequately address item 3 (explanation of
the proposed judgment) because it lacks sufficient economic
analysis.\83\ Relpromax provides its own economic analysis, arguing
that it shows that the proposed decree is inadequate.\84\ Relpromax's
comments about the adequacy of the CIS are thus in fact complaints
about the substance of the proposed Final Judgment. It is clear from
the detailed substantive comments filed here (including those of
Relpromax) that the CIS contains sufficient explanation to allow the
public to understand the provisions of the decree and submit meaningful
comments.
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\83\ Relpromax seems to suggest that a CIS should include a
level of analysis similar to that contained in a Regulatory Impact
Analysis (``RIA'') required by Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 when
a federal regulatory agency is considering a significant rule.
Relpromax Cmts. at 15. RIAs must contain detailed cost-benefit
analyses as well as a discussion of a number of specified possible
alternatives to a proposed regulation. See Office of Mgmt. & Budget,
Exec. Office of the President, OMB Circular A-4, Regulatory Analysis
(2003). This is far beyond what is required in a CIS.
\84\ Relpromax purports to quantify harm from the merger and
benefits from the proposed remedy. Relpromax Cmts. at 2-9. However,
most of its estimates consists merely of ``round number figures''
for harms the author was ``unable to calculate.'' Id. at 4.
Moreover, Relpromax's methodology grossly understates the likely
benefits of the proposed remedy. In particular, it assumes that any
LCC entry and expansion that results from improved access to
congested airports will merely serve to partially offset price
increases resulting from lost competition between the merging
parties. On the contrary, in markets where the proposed remedy
facilitates LCC entry and expansion, consumers are likely to enjoy
substantial net benefits.
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Relpromax also complains that the CIS does not meet the Tunney Act
requirements because the description of alternatives to the decree
considered by the United States (item 6 above) discusses only
continuing to litigate the case through trial. Relpromax argues that
because the statute refers to ``alternatives'' in the plural the United
States is required to describe multiple alternatives. Relpromax Cmts.
at 10-11. The statute only requires that the CIS describe alternatives
the United States ``actually considered.'' 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(b). In
this case the United States did not consider alternatives other than
continuing the litigation, and therefore the CIS meets the requirements
of the Tunney Act.
4. The Remedy Is Not the Result of Political Pressure
Certain commenters argue that that the settlement is not in the
public interest because--according to them--the settlement resulted
from lobbying by the airlines and political pressure directed toward
the United States. Messina/Alioto Cmts. at 1; FlyerRights.org Cmts. at
1. Any allegations that the settlement is the result of improper
lobbying or political pressure are both unsubstantiated and meritless.
The settlement resulted from good faith negotiations between the
Antitrust Division and Plaintiff States, on the one hand, and
Defendants, on the other. It reflects substantial relief that addresses
the competitive harm alleged in the Complaint. In short, there is no
basis to allege that the settlement results from any impropriety.\85\
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\85\ The Messina/Alioto comments also wrongly suggest that the
representatives of consumers, unlike the airlines, did not have
access to federal officials. Messina/Alioto Cmts. at 1-2. In fact,
as some of the other commenters can attest, the Department of
Justice had meetings and conversations with affected parties
throughout the entire investigation and litigation process. The
United States took the views of consumers into account when crafting
the proposed relief. The United States was not, of course, at
liberty to share the details of sensitive settlement negotiations
with third parties.
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The commenters' mere speculation of bad faith or malfeasance is
insufficient to justify rejection of a proposed consent decree. See
United States v. Associated Milk Producers, 394 F. Supp. 29, 39-40
(W.D. Mo. 1975), aff'd, 534 F.2d 113 (8th Cir. 1976) (finding that
lobbying activities by the defendant--even ones that are ``intensive
and gross''--were insufficient to reject proposed decree or require
further evidentiary hearing). Moreover, one commenter's request for a
``full disclosure of the papers leading up to the settlement,''
FlyerRights.org Cmts. at 1, should be rejected as the commenter offers
no reason to doubt the sufficiency of Defendants' compliance with the
Tunney Act's disclosure requirements, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(g), and no
basis to otherwise justify a fishing expedition. See Associated Milk
Producers, 394 F. Supp. at 38-40.
5. Closing of the Merger Prior to Entry of the Final Judgment Is
Consistent with Tunney Act Requirements
Two commenters suggest that allowing Defendants to consummate the
merger prior to entry of the Final Judgment was inconsistent with the
Tunney Act and not appropriate. AAI Cmts. at 1 n.1; Relpromax Cmts. at
12-13. It is common practice to close a transaction prior to completion
of the Tunney Act process. Nothing in the Tunney Act prevents the
parties from closing and courts have long acknowledged and accepted
this practice. See, e.g., United States v. InBev N.V./S.A., 2009-2
Trade Cas. (CCH) ] 76,736 at 8 (D.D.C. 2009) (``consistent with
asserted Department of Justice policy . . . the merger was allowed to
close . . . while approval of the proposed Final Judgment [was]
[[Page 14294]]
pending''); United States v. SBC Commc'ns, Inc., 489 F. Supp. 2d 1, 8
(D.D.C. 2007) (noting that the transaction closed over a year prior to
entry of the Final Judgment ``in keeping with [DOJ's] standard practice
that neither stipulations nor pending proposed final judgments prohibit
the closing of the mergers''); United States v. Pearson plc, 55 F.
Supp. 2d 43, 44-45 (D.D.C. 1999) (observing that the transaction was
consummated and divestitures completed prior to the public interest
determination under the Tunney Act).\86\ Of course, the United States
retains the right to withdraw its consent to the decree or the
settlement could be rejected by the Court. Defendants, by choosing to
close prior to entry of the Final Judgment, have accepted the risk of
undoing the merger should it be necessary.
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\86\ The Bankruptcy Court hearing the AMR case specifically
rejected as ``based on a faulty assumption'' the private plaintiff's
argument that the Tunney Act bars consummation of a merger pending
entry of a proposed Final Judgment. Memorandum of Decision and Order
at 22-23, In re AMR Corp. & Fjord v. AMR Corp., (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.
Nov. 27, 2013) (11-15463 & Adv. Pr. No. 13-01392), available at
https://www.amrcaseinfo.com/pdflib/72_01392.pdf. The Bankruptcy
Court denied plaintiff's request to enjoin the closing of the
merger. Id.
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CONCLUSION
After reviewing the public comments, the United States continues to
believe that the proposed Final Judgment, as drafted, provides an
effective and appropriate remedy for the antitrust violation alleged in
the Complaint and is therefore in the public interest. Upon publication
of this Response to Comments in the Federal Register, the United States
will file a certification that all of the requirements of the APPA have
been satisfied, and will file a motion with this Court to enter the
proposed Final Judgment. The United States submits that a hearing is
not necessary.
Dated: March 10, 2014.
Respectfully submitted,
Michael D. Billiel (DC Bar No. 394377)
U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street
NW., Suite 8000, Washington, DC 20530, Telephone: (202) 307-6666,
Facsimile: (202) 307-5802, Email: michael.billiel@usdoj.gov
[FR Doc. 2014-05555 Filed 3-12-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-11-P