Sunday, September 15, 2013

The Stars At Night and the Move to See Them Better

Seeing the Milky Way at Natural Bridges National Monument in Utah

Since moving to the West, I've developed an interest in "dark skies," the movement to address light pollution and see the night skies better, while at the same time encouraging a better public understanding of the environmental and biological costs of too much artificial light.
My most recent article on this was in Al Jazeera America.
One of the people I spoke with was Paul Bogard, whose new book, “The End of Night: Searching For Natural Darkness in an Age of Artificial Light” (Little, Brown 2013), is a trenchant look at the phenomenon. And one of the things I liked best about the book was its evocation of the moments of awe most of us will feel when confronted with a truly dark sky -- the kind of star-filled sky that our ancestors witnessed throughout history until humans began to lose touch with true dark skies with advent of electric light more than a century ago, and the subsequent domination of the dark that this new light source achieved throughout most of the world.
When I spoke with him a few weeks ago, Bogard recalled his first experience with a starry sky, as a youth 20 years ago, while backpacking in Morocco near the Atlas Mountains on the desolate edge of the Sahara.
“I walked out in the middle of the night and I was startled. I’m from Minnesota, and my first thought was that it was snowing. Of course, I’m standing there in summer, in shorts and no shirt; it clearly was not snowing. I was just seeing a sky filled with stars, stars that started at one horizon and went to the next. No moon, no artificial light. Just a night tumbling with more stars than I ever imagined were in the universe,” he said.
There are now several generations of people in developed parts of the world who have never seen a truly starry night. There are generations of humans for whom the only clearly identifiable object in the night sky is the moon. 
The effects of seeing a clear night sky for the first time can be interesting. In 1994, when the Northridge earthquake struck Los Angeles, and widespread power outages plunged some of the region into pre-dawn darkness, some alarmed citizens called emergency centers to report seeing a giant “silvery cloud” over the Los Angeles Basin. Was it a monstrous terrorist gas attack? A meteorological freak related to the earthquake?
No, it was just the Milky Way in all of its splendor, spread across a suddenly dark sky. They had simply never seen the Milky Way before.
Here's a link (which in turn has a wealth of scientific and other links) to the International Dark-Sky Association, the Tucson-based worldwide group that is doing spectacular work in calling attention to light pollution and the virtues of using common sense to encourage darker skies.
And here's a link to the dark-sky program at Natural Bridges National Monument in Utah, one of the places in the U.S. where you can still really see the stars.

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While News Stories Wail About a Few Burnt NJ Boardwalk Shops ...

What's the story here? A suspicious fire on a Jersey Boardwalk that burned down some pizza joints and carny booths, a bar, an ice cream stand and an unoccupied arcade after a very poor summer season? Or devastating floods in communities at the Front Range of the Rockies, with more than 1,000 people still unaccounted for?

Well, it's a wonderment, because there seems to me to be a disproportionate amount of media attention continuing toward a stretch of unoccupied joints that caught fire in a Jersey boardwalk town after the summer season, while a major disaster is unfolding in an area stretching 200 miles north to south along the eastern foot of the Rockies, where five people are reported dead and 1,500 homes destroyed so far.

Back East, New Jersey Gov. Chris ("Thar She Blows") Christie, who by most guesses is hoping to run for president, continued to use his considerable media savvy to dominate overblown coverage of the Seaside Park, NJ, boardwalk fire, in which 30 or 40 shops, wooden structures all, burned in a blaze that followed a very poor summer season.

The cause is under investigation. Fire Marshal Christie warns gravely not to pay undue attention to the arrival on the scene of investigators from the U.S. Department of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Who knows, they might just be on a day-trip to ride the bumper cars -- since most of the Seaside Heights Boardwalk was actually unaffected by the suspicious fire.

It's Day Three after the fire in a tacky Jersey boardwalk town that few media grandees would be caught dead actually visiting, and we're still seeing tearjerk stories about vows to "rebuild" on an "iconic" Boardwalk -- as if a tragedy of immeasurable proportion had ensued there, rather than a big fire in which some unoccupied wood buildings burned down -- or were burned down. Cue the wailing pleas for emergency federal and state aid.

Meanwhile, in northern Colorado, along the Front Range, the downpours continued today and the National Guard had to ground helicopters searching for survivors. The flood damage was staggering, and it's getting worse.

So, really now, what's the top news?


Is this the big story?


...Or this?

http://photos.denverpost.com/2013/09/12/photos-massive-flash-flooding-along-front-range-of-colorado/

Here's a link to the Colorado Office of Emergency Management, with updated flood emergency and relief information.

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Friday, September 13, 2013

A N.J. Boardwalk Fire After Labor Day? Stop the Presses!

Crappy steel roller coaster falls into ocean, sleeps with the fishes, after Hurricane Sandy in Seaside Heights, NJ
The media do love a narrative, and once one is established lock onto it with the tenacity of a Gila monster.

Hence we see today worldwide coverage of a fire yesterday on the Seaside Park Boardwalk, near the site in adjacent Seaside Heights of the world-famous Hurricane Sandy devastation photo from last year. That photo ("iconic," to evoke that silly word the media just love), hyped storm damage but actually just depicted the not-really-unfortunate collapse into the ocean of a crappy, steel roller coaster (maximum height 44 feet!) In fact, the hurricane probably saved its owners the expense of having the thing demolished to make way for something more with more appeal. But pointing that out would have disturbed the narrative for the media.

Now lookit the Daily Mail newspaper hyperventilating on the new Boardwalk tragedy. All the way from England! And Jesus, lookit all those photos of that crappy roller coaster that are appearing again.

Then witness the New Jersey governor, Chris ("Thar She Blows") Christie once again with the TV cameras, wailing like Margaret Hamilton during her final meltdown in the Wizard of Oz.  OK, actually, Christie said he was so traumatized by yesterday's Boardwalk fire that he "wanted to throw up." Not an image I think we want in our heads, incidentally.

[From last year, here's Christie in standard form on the Seaside Heights boardwalk early last summer before the hurricane, surrounded by bodyguards, seeming to go after a protester.] And to the right there, that's Christie with a supersized ice cream cone last year, before the lap band surgery he thinks will help him become president some day.

The new Boardwalk fire narrative is: Valiant seashore town, just recovering from monster hurricane, devastated, utterly destroyed again by cruel, cruel fate. Stricken town will "once again need to rebuild, vowing to do so." Fatuous tearjerkers on this theme abound, while media coverage of the very real flood disaster affecting people and actual operating businesses in Colorado are played inside.

The reality is:

--OK, this was a large fire on big wooden walkway -- but one of the sort that usually gets some routine regional media coverage.  20 bars and pizza joints and an arcade, maybe 30 marginal businesses in all, in a mostly unoccupied ramshackle wood structures, were burned down on a wooden boardwalk section of Seaside Park, a neighbor of the far-more-popular Seaside Heights. Many of those buildings had been damaged in Hurricane Sandy and many had failed to reopen afterward and were essentially out of business. Repeat: These were shuttered joints. The admittedly engaging if invincibly tacky Seaside Heights Boardwalk was not "destroyed" this week, and had suffered only minimal damage during last summer's hurricane. By the way, two of the world's most prominent antique carousels, one of which thumps along with a fully restored calliope-like mechanical band, operate on the Seaside Heights Boardwalk, and are a sight to see. (Unaffected by either the hurricane or the fire).

--This fire occurred after Labor Day, following a summer season in which business was down sharply in Seaside Heights and Seaside Park. Except for day-trippers and kids on a summertime binge (and politicians with expensive summer houses in far, far tonier Jersey Shore towns prancing around for the TV cameras), these are not popular spots for vacationers.

--Business has steadily been declining for decades at New Jersey boardwalk towns like Seaside and Wildwood, partly because many hotels and rooming houses are extortionately priced, high-handed toward customers and very poor in quality (these are quick-buck businesses that have to make their dough in a very short summer season, subject to iffy weather).  During the first 17 years of my life, I spent summers in Wildwood. But that was a very long time ago, in a place literally and figuratively far away.

--Boardwalk arson fires have been not-uncommon in Jersey Shore towns after Labor Day, following disastrously bad seasons. Police are looking into things, with an eye toward past experience. Not the media, though, because a phony narrative still gets attention, along with photos of fire, which always get attention. Just like that crappy steel roller coaster sinking morosely into the surf.

UPDATE Sept. 15 -- The flooding in and around Boulder, Colorado, and not some burnt unoccupied Boardwalk shacks in "iconic" (ugh) Seasiode Park, NJ, is the real story for current news of a disaster.

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Saturday, September 07, 2013

Dark Skies

Dark skies matter. They matter for aesthetics and culture and science and health.

If you have ever seen the Milky Way, you know....

More on this subject later, but good for Al Jazeera America for this. Because dark skies do matter.

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Until about 100 years ago, the night sky was full of stars. 

Thursday, September 05, 2013

List of Airports Where TSA Is Expanding PreCheck

The T.S.A. appears to be serious about this excellent plan to significantly expand access to the PreCheck trusted traveler program that reduces hassles at the checkpoints for those who qualify.

PreCheck started out in a phase many considered to be obnoxious -- that is, it was open only to the highest-spending elite customers "invited" by participating airlines. But it's since been expanded to encompass a much bigger segment of the general flying population, including those who belong to the popular Global Entry program of the Customs and Border Protection agency, which provides easier reentry into the U.S., allowing members to breeze through immigration and customs without waiting in those Ellis Island-like lines. And the T.S.A. is also starting up its own opt-in PreCheck program, which it has described as a kind of "Global Entry lite."

So far so good, right?

So here's the T.S.A.'s announcement in full, with the list of airports:



Press Release

TSA Pre✓™ Expands to 60 Additional Airports


Wednesday, September 4, 2013

More Passengers Able to Experience Expedited Screening

WASHINGTON — The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) announced today that it will expand its TSA expedited screening program to 60 new airports in addition to the existing 40, bringing the total number of airports with TSA Pre✓™ to 100. These airports are expected to have TSA Pre✓™ lanes at select checkpoints by the end of the year.
The agency also will expand the number of TSA Pre✓™ lanes and availability at the existing 40 airports in the coming weeks.
TSA Pre✓™ is an expedited screening program that allows pre-approved airline travelers to leave on their shoes, light outerwear and belt, keep their laptop in its case and their 3-1-1 compliant liquids/gels bag in a carry-on in select screening lanes. To date, more than 15 million passengers have experienced TSA Pre✓™ since it launched in October 2011.
“As TSA continues to move away from a one-size-fits-all approach to transportation security, we are looking for more opportunities to provide the most effective security in the most efficient way possible,” said TSA Administrator John S. Pistole. “Expanding TSA Pre✓™ to more locations enables many more passengers across the country to experience expedited screening.”
Passengers who are eligible for TSA Pre✓™ include U.S. citizens of frequent traveler programs invited by participating airlines. Additionally, U.S. citizens who are members of a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Trusted Traveler program and Canadian citizens who are members of CBP’s NEXUS program qualify to participate. Later this year TSA will launch an application program, allowing more U.S. citizens to enroll in TSA Pre✓™.
Eligible passengers traveling on Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Hawaiian Airlines, United Airlines, US Airways and Virgin America may receive expedited screening benefits. JetBlue and Southwest are expected to begin participating when operationally ready.
If a passenger is eligible for expedited screening, a TSA Pre✓™ indicator will be embedded in the barcode of the boarding pass so that when scanned at the checkpoint, the passenger may be referred to a TSA Pre✓™ lane.  Many participating airlines already print a TSA Pre✓™ indicator directly on the boarding pass so passengers will know in advance they have been cleared for expedited screening. TSA will always incorporate random and unpredictable security measures throughout the airport. No individual will be guaranteed expedited screening.
Travelers can check the TSA Pre✓™ Participating Airports page for information on locations and hours of active TSA Pre✓™ lanes.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was created in the wake of September 11, 2001, to strengthen the security of the nation’s transportation systems and ensure the freedom of movement for people and commerce. Today, TSA secures the nation’s airports and screens all commercial airline passengers and baggage. TSA uses a risk-based strategy and works closely with transportation, law enforcement and intelligence communities to set the standard for excellence in transportation security. TSA’s workforce comprises approximately 50,000 frontline officers who screen approximately 1.8 million travelers each day at more than 450 airports nationwide. For more information about TSA, please visit our website at www.tsa.gov.

Upcoming TSA Pre✓™ locations

An asterisk denotes a current TSA Pre™ location. Once new TSA Pre✓™ locations are active, they will be listed on the TSA Pre✓™ Participating Airports page.
Alabama:
Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport
Alaska:
Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport*
Arizona:
Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport*
Tucson International Airport
Arkansas:
Bill and Hillary Clinton National Airport (Little Rock)
California:
Bob Hope Airport (Burbank)
Fresno Yosemite International Airport
John Wayne Airport (Orange County)*
Long Beach Airport
Los Angeles International Airport*
Oakland International Airport
Ontario International Airport
Sacramento International Airport
San Diego International Airport
San Francisco International Airport*
San Jose International Airport
Colorado:
Colorado Springs Airport
Denver International Airport*
Connecticut:
Bradley International Airport (Hartford)
Florida:
Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport*
Jacksonville International Airport
Miami International Airport*
Orlando International Airport*
Palm Beach International Airport (West Palm Beach)
Pensacola International Airport
Southwest Florida International Airport (Fort Myers)
Tampa International Airport*
Georgia:
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport*
Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport
Guam:
Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport (Hagåtña)
Hawaii:
Honolulu International Airport*
Kahului Airport
Kona International Airport
Lihue Airport
Idaho:
Boise Airport
Illinois:
Chicago Midway International Airport
Chicago O'Hare International Airport*
Indiana:
Indianapolis International Airport*
Iowa:
Des Moines International Airport
Kansas:
Wichita Mid-Continent Airport
Kentucky:
Louisville International Airport
Louisiana:
Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport
Maine:
Portland International Jetport
Maryland:
Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport*
Massachusetts:
Boston Logan International Airport*
Michigan:
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport*
Gerald R. Ford International Airport (Grand Rapids)
Minnesota:
Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport*
Missouri:
Kansas City International Airport
Lambert-St. Louis International Airport*
Nebraska:
Eppley Airfield (Omaha)
Nevada:
McCarran International Airport (Las Vegas)*
Reno-Tahoe International Airport
New Hampshire:
Manchester-Boston Regional Airport
New Jersey:
Newark Liberty International Airport*
New Mexico:
Albuquerque International Sunport
New York:
Albany International Airport
Buffalo Niagara International Airport
Greater Rochester International Airport
John F. Kennedy International Airport (New York City)*
LaGuardia Airport (New York City)*
Syracuse Hancock International Airport
Westchester County Airport
North Carolina:
Charlotte-Douglas International Airport*
Piedmont Triad International Airport (Greensboro)
Raleigh-Durham International Airport*
Ohio:
Akron-Canton Airport
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport*
Cleveland Hopkins International Airport*
Dayton International Airport
Port Columbus International Airport
Oklahoma:
Tulsa International Airport
Will Rogers World Airport (Oklahoma City)
Oregon:
Portland International Airport*
Pennsylvania:
Philadelphia International Airport*
Pittsburgh International Airport*
Puerto Rico:
Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport (San Juan)*
Rhode Island:
T. F. Green Airport (Providence)
South Carolina:
Charleston International Airport
Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport
Myrtle Beach International Airport
Tennessee:
McGhee Tyson Airport (Knoxville)
Memphis International Airport*
Nashville International Airport*
Texas:
Austin-Bergstrom International Airport*
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport*
Dallas Love Field
El Paso International Airport
George Bush Intercontinental Airport (Houston)*
San Antonio International Airport
William P. Hobby Airport (Houston)
Utah:
Salt Lake City International Airport*
Virginia:
Norfolk International Airport
Richmond International Airport
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport*
Washington Dulles International Airport*
Washington:
Seattle-Tacoma International Airport*
Spokane International Airport
Wisconsin:
Dane County Regional Airport (Madison)
General Mitchell International Airport (Milwauke



Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Text of Justice Department Suit to Block Merger of American Airlines and US Airways

Whoa, I did not see this one coming.

The Justice Department, along with the attorneys general of six states and Washington D.C., sued to block the well-underway $11 billion merger of American Airlines and US Airways, a merger that was driven by US Air, which would have run the combined company. The merger was to have been finalized this month.

Besides asserting that the merger would unacceptably diminish already stressed domestic air service while raising fares, the complaint takes on the fee-bonanza that airlines have been wallowing in -- and if I were in the airline industry (where antitrust law is sometimes openly laughed at), I'd be looking very carefully and warily about the potential future implications of language like this, from the Justice Department announcement today:

"The complaint also alleges that the merger is likely to result in higher ancillary fees, such as fees charged for checked bags and flight changes.  In recent years, the airlines have introduced fees for those services, which were previously included in the price of a ticket. These fees have become huge profit centers for the airlines.  In 2012, domestic airlines generated more than $6 billion in fees from checked bags and flight changes alone.  The legacy carriers often match each other when one introduces or increases a fee, and if others do not match the initiating carrier tends to withdraw the change.  By reducing the number of airlines, the merger will likely make it easier for the remaining carriers to coordinate fee increases, resulting in higher fees for consumers."

Some of the media often present stories like this with brief excerpts, accompanied by speculation and instant interpretation, but without linking to actual texts, in some reflection of 1970s mentality about "space." Hey, gang, space on the Internet is infinite.

So here's a link to the 56-page Justice Department complaint. And below is the full text of the announcement..

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 Justice Department Files Antitrust Lawsuit Challenging Proposed Merger Between US Airways and American Airlines
Merger Would Result in U.S. Consumers Paying Higher Airfares and Receiving Less Service; Lawsuit Seeks to Maintain Competition in the Airline Industry
The Department of Justice, six state attorneys general and the District of Columbia filed a civil antitrust lawsuit today challenging the proposed $11 billion merger between US Airways Group Inc. and American Airlines’ parent corporation, AMR Corp.  The department said that the merger, which would result in the creation of the world’s largest airline, would substantially lessen competition for commercial air travel in local markets throughout the United States and result in passengers paying higher airfares and receiving less service. 

The Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division, along with the attorneys general, filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, which seeks to prevent the companies from merging and to preserve the existing head-to-head competition between the firms that the transaction would eliminate.  The participating attorneys general are:  Texas, where American Airlines is headquartered; Arizona, where US Airways is headquartered; Florida; the District of Columbia; Pennsylvania; Tennessee; and Virginia.

“Airline travel is vital to millions of American consumers who fly regularly for either business or pleasure,” said Attorney General Eric Holder.  “By challenging this merger, the Department of Justice is saying that the American people deserve better.  This transaction would result in consumers paying the price – in higher airfares, higher fees and fewer choices.  Today’s action proves our determination to fight for the best interests of consumers by ensuring robust competition in the marketplace.”

Last year, business and leisure airline travelers spent more than $70 billion on airfare for travel throughout the United States.   In recent years, major airlines have, in tandem, raised fares, imposed new and higher fees and reduced service, the department said.

“The department sued to block this merger because it would eliminate competition between US Airways and American and put consumers at risk of higher prices and reduced service,” said Bill Baer, Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division. “If this merger goes forward, even a small increase in the price of airline tickets, checked bags or flight change fees would result in hundreds of millions of dollars of harm to American consumers.  Both airlines have stated they can succeed on a standalone basis and consumers deserve the benefit of that continuing competitive dynamic.”

American and US Airways compete directly on more than a thousand routes where one or both offer connecting service, representing tens of billions of dollars in annual revenues.  They engage in head-to-head competition with nonstop service on routes worth about $2 billion in annual route-wide revenues.  Eliminating this head-to-head competition would give the merged airline the incentive and ability to raise airfares, the department said in its complaint.

According to the department’s complaint, the vast majority of domestic airline routes are already highly concentrated.  The merger would create the largest airline in the world and result in four airlines controlling more than 80 percent of the United States commercial air travel market. 

The merger would also entrench the merged airline as the dominant carrier at Washington Reagan National Airport, with control of 69 percent of the take-off and landing slots.  The merged airline would have a monopoly on 63 percent of the nonstop routes served out of Reagan National airport.  As a result, Washington, D.C., area passengers would likely see higher prices and fewer choices if the merger is allowed, the department said in its complaint.  Blocking the merger will preserve current competition and service, including flights that US Airways currently offers from Washington’s Reagan National Airport.

The complaint also describes how, in recent years, the major airlines have succeeded in raising prices, imposing new fees and reducing service.  The complaint quotes several public statements by senior US Airways executives directly attributing this trend to a reduction in the number of competitors in the U.S. market:

·          President Scott Kirby said, “Three successful fare increases – [we are] able to pass along to customers because of consolidation.”
·          At an industry conference in 2012, Kirby said, “Consolidation has also…allowed the industry to do things like ancillary revenues…. That is a structural permanent change to the industry and one that’s impossible to overstate the benefit from it.”
·          As US Airways CEO Parker stated in February 2013, combining US Airways and American would be  the last major piece needed to fully rationalize the industry.” 
·          A US Airways document said that capacity reductions have “enabled” fare increases.
  “The merger of these two important competitors will just make things worse –exacerbating current airline industry trends toward reduced service, increasing fares and increasing passenger fees,” added Baer.  

As the complaint describes, absent the merger, US Airways and American will continue to provide important competitive constraints on each other and on other airlines.  Today, US Airways competes vigorously for price-conscious travelers by offering discounts of up to 40 percent for connecting flights on other airlines’ nonstop routes under its Advantage Fares program. The other legacy airlines – American, Delta and United – routinely match the nonstop fares where they offer connecting service in order to avoid inciting costly fare wars.  The Advantage Fares strategy has been successful for US Airways because its network is different from the networks of the larger carriers. If the proposed merger is completed, the combined airline’s network will look more like the existing American, Delta and United networks, and as a result, the Advantage Fares program will likely be eliminated, resulting in higher prices and less services for consumers. An internal analysis at American in October 2012, concluded, “The [Advantage Fares] program would have to be eliminated in a merger with American, as American’s large, nonstop markets would now be susceptible to reactionary pricing from Delta and United.” And, another American executive said that same month, “The industry will force alignment to a single approach–one that aligns with the large legacy carriers as it is revenue maximizing.”  By ending the Advantage Fares program, the merger would eliminate lower fares for millions of consumers, the department said.
  The complaint also alleges that the merger is likely to result in higher ancillary fees, such as fees charged for checked bags and flight changes.  In recent years, the airlines have introduced fees for those services, which were previously included in the price of a ticket. These fees have become huge profit centers for the airlines.  In 2012, domestic airlines generated more than $6 billion in fees from checked bags and flight changes alone.  The legacy carriers often match each other when one introduces or increases a fee, and if others do not match the initiating carrier tends to withdraw the change.  By reducing the number of airlines, the merger will likely make it easier for the remaining carriers to coordinate fee increases, resulting in higher fees for consumers.
  The department also said that the merger will make coordination easier among the legacy carriers.  Although low-cost carriers such as Southwest and JetBlue offer consumers many benefits, they fly to fewer locations and are unlikely to be able to constrain the coordinated behavior among those carriers.
  American Airlines is currently operating in bankruptcy.  Absent the merger, American is likely to exit bankruptcy as a vigorous competitor, with strong incentives to grow to better compete with Delta and United, the department said. American recently made the largest aircraft order in industry history, and its post-bankruptcy standalone plan called for increasing both the number of flights and the number of destinations served by those flights at each of its hubs.
  The department’s complaint describes US Airways executives’ fear of American’s standalone growth plan as “industry destabilizing.”  The complaint states that US Airways worries that American’s growth plan would cause “others” to react “with their own enhanced growth plans…,” and that the resulting effect would increase competitive pressures throughout the industry.  The department said the merger will allow US Airways’ management to abandon these aggressive growth plans and continue the industry’s current trend toward higher prices and less service.
  The department’s complaint states that executives of both airlines have repeatedly said that they do not need the merger to succeed.  The complaint states that US Airways’ CEO observed in December 2011, that “A[merican] is not going away, they will be stronger post-bankruptcy because they will have less debt and reduced labor costs.”  US Airways’ executive vice president wrote in July 2012, that, “There is NOquestion about AMR’s ability to survive on a standalone basis.”  And, as recently as January 2013, American’s management presented plans that would increase the destinations it serves in the United States and the frequency of its flights, and would position American to compete independently as a profitable airline with aggressive plans for growth.
  AMR is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Fort Worth, Texas.  AMR is the parent company of American Airlines.  Last year American flew more than 80 million passengers to more than 250 destinations worldwide and took in more than $24 billion in revenue.  In November 2011, American filed for bankruptcy reorganization.
  US Airways is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Tempe, Ariz.  Last year US Airways flew more than 50 million passengers to more than 200 destinations worldwide and took in more than $13 billion in revenue.

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