BoeingBoy
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Fliers are back. So why are carriers crying for bailouts?
For the first time since 9/11, airlines are flying high. Airports are teeming, planes are full, and commercial travel in April topped traffic for the same month in 2000.
Yet two vestiges of the post-9/11 downturn remain: steep losses by most airlines and a federal bailout program that has pumped $6.5 billion into the industry. Last week, the airlines were back on Capitol Hill seeking new relief from taxes and insurance costs. Their hat-in-hand request comes as the federal Air Transportation Stabilization Board mulls whether to grant a $1.6 billion loan guarantee to teetering United Airlines.
USA Today Article
Jim
For the first time since 9/11, airlines are flying high. Airports are teeming, planes are full, and commercial travel in April topped traffic for the same month in 2000.
Yet two vestiges of the post-9/11 downturn remain: steep losses by most airlines and a federal bailout program that has pumped $6.5 billion into the industry. Last week, the airlines were back on Capitol Hill seeking new relief from taxes and insurance costs. Their hat-in-hand request comes as the federal Air Transportation Stabilization Board mulls whether to grant a $1.6 billion loan guarantee to teetering United Airlines.
USA Today Article
Jim