Shuttle America

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Shuttle America Airlines
IATA
S5
ICAO
TCF
Callsign
MERCURY[1]
Founded 1995
Hubs

As United Express:
O'Hare International Airport
As Delta Connection:
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport
New York LaGuardia

Frequent-flyer program
Airport lounge
  • Delta Sky Club (Delta Connection)
  • United Club (United Express)
Alliance
Fleet size 68
Destinations See Below
Parent company Republic Airways Holdings
Headquarters Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
Key people Bryan Bedford (CEO)
Website http://www.shuttleamerica.com

Shuttle America Corporation is a regional airline based in Indianapolis, Indiana,[2] USA. It feeds United Airlines flights at Chicago under the United Express brand, and feeds Delta Air Lines flights at Atlanta, New York-LaGuardia, and New York-JFK under the Delta Connection brand. Shuttle America also operates Delta Shuttle's three East Coast routes, serving Boston, Washington, D.C., and Chicago from New York-LaGuardia.

History

N801SA boards at Bradley International Airport (BDL) to Wilmington, DE (ILG) in 1999.

Shuttle America was established in 1995 by former CEO David Hackett, and began operations on November 12, 1998 [3] as a low-fare commuter airline, headquartered in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, the location of Hartford's Bradley International Airport. Shuttle America's first route was Hartford, Connecticut to Buffalo, New York. Shuttle America got much publicity for their launch because of their "super-low $29 fares". Shuttle America's first aircraft; registered N801SA, was a 50-seat Bombardier Dash 8-300 with leather seats and a very creative and patriotic paint scheme. Shuttle America had rapid growth in its first year, adding more aircraft and destinations.[4]

In 1999, Shuttle America made a controversial move to reach the Boston market. Instead of choosing the busy Logan Airport in East Boston, Shuttle America chose a nearby regional airport, Hanscom Field. Located in Bedford, Massachusetts, just 12 miles (19 km) west of Boston, it had amenities not found at the larger Logan Airport. With free parking, rental cars, and convenience to the I-95 highway, it was promoted as "Hassle-free Hanscom Field". From Hanscom, Shuttle America served Buffalo, LaGuardia Airport in New York, Trenton, New Jersey, and Greensboro, North Carolina via Trenton. At that time Trenton, New Jersey was acting as a hub because of its central location in their route network.

At the peak time of their operation without codeshares, the airline was flying six Dash 8-300 aircraft and transported over 3000 passengers per day. Additional destinations in their route network during this time period include Albany, New York, Islip, New York, Norfolk, Virginia, and Wilmington, Delaware. Despite the success in quickly expanding throughout the region, the airline attained financial trouble with its growth.

Just 5 months before the September 11, 2001 attacks April 17, 2001, Shuttle America went into bankruptcy and was purchased by Wexford Holdings LLC., who at the time also owned Chautauqua Airlines. Shuttle America then started flying as US Airways Express in a codeshare agreement, adding service to US Airways' Philadelphia and Pittsburgh hubs as well as seasonal service to Martha's Vineyard, MA. At the same time, Shuttle America was transitioning to the smaller Dash 8-100 and started taking deliveries of former Chautauqua Saab 340 aircraft. The Dash 8-100's had been leased from Allegheny Airlines and were a temporary stop gap measure to allow for the spool up of the Saab 340 fleet. Eventually, the Dash 8-300's were sold to various airlines including Caribbean Star and Piedmont Airlines while the independent branding of Shuttle America was phased out in lieu of a full network of codeshares with US Airways and United Airlines with subsequent route changes to feed those carriers. In 2002, Shuttle America moved its headquarters to Fort Wayne, Indiana. In spring 2005, it was purchased by Republic Airways Holdings for $1 million. Headquarters were moved from Fort Wayne to Republic's Indianapolis base shortly afterwards, and the Saab 340 fleet was replaced by Embraer 170 aircraft operating for Delta Connection and United Express.

In October 2008, a short-lived operating partnership was established with Mokulele Airlines to feed their hub in Honolulu with three aircraft.
Former Mokulele Airlines Embraer 170 operated by Shuttle America
These Embraer 170 aircraft operated in the livery of Mokulele Airlines until October 2009, when Republic entered into a new joint venture agreement with Mesa Air Group, with the latter airline's Canadair Regional Jet aircraft operating jet flights within Hawaii.[5]

Operations

Shuttle America currently has five crew member bases: Atlanta, Columbus, Chicago, Indianapolis and New York-LaGuardia. Its fleet comprises Embraer 170 jetliners with a two-cabin seating configuration, allowing for 6 seats in First Class and 64 seats in economy, and 12 First Class seats on the E-175. These aircraft were initially operated by sister company Chautauqua Airlines, but Chautauqua was forced to transfer their 170s to Shuttle America after the pilots' union at American Airlines claimed the aircraft violated a "scope clause" regulating the size of regional aircraft operated by airlines that also operate under the American Airlines IATA airline designator code. Beginning in July, 2008, slightly larger Embraer 175 aircraft began to replace the Embraer 170 fleet in service with Delta. Towards the end of 2008, the airline achieved a major feat by being chosen to replace Delta Shuttle's MD-88 operations between New York's La Guardia Airport and Washington Reagan National Airport on the same hourly schedule that Delta has operated with larger aircraft for decades. Beginning June, 2010, new flights by Shuttle America on behalf of Delta Shuttle will serve Chicago's O'Hare International Airport from New York-LaGuardia with 11 round trips per day.

Callsign

On July 3, 2007, Shuttle America received approval from the ICAO to change its ATC callsign from Shuttlecraft to Mercury. However, prior to the changing of the callsign to Mercury it was changed to Crossroads, but the word cross was confusing to air traffic controllers. This change was necessary due to the similar sounding Air Shuttle callsign used by Mesa Airlines. Although Mercury proved to be a suitable callsign, at busier airports and TRACONs it can often tend to sound much like "American", but with very different ranges in flight numbers between the two carriers it does not raise much of a real issue for pilots and controllers alike. The IDENT code remained the same as TCF. The IATA code of the airline has remained S5 through this time.

United Express Embraer 170 operated by Shuttle America
Delta Connection Embraer 175 operated by Shuttle America

Destinations

Operated as United Express

Operated as Delta Connection

Fleet

As of December 2013, the Shuttle America fleet consists of the following aircraft:[6]

Aircraft Total Orders Passengers Operated For Notes
F Y+ Y Total
Embraer E-170 40 6 16 48 70 United Express 2 planes on wet lease from Republic Airlines For Delta
2 unbranded planes
12 9 12 48 69 Delta Connection
Embraer E-175 16 12 12 52 76 Delta Connection/Delta Shuttle
Total 68

Incidents

Shuttle America has not lost a plane or had a fatality, it has however had incidents in its history.

  • On June 8, 2005, Shuttle America, operating as United Express flight 7534, inbound from Dallas ft worth, skidded off Runway 19L at Washington Dulles International Airport after being unable to lock the right main landing gear for landing, and the gear failed on the Embraer 170 aircraft. None of the crew or passengers were reported injured.
  • On February 18, 2007, Shuttle America, operating as Delta Connection flight 6448, skidded off the shorter 6,017 foot crosswind runway and crashed through a fence while landing on runway 28 at 3:14pm at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport at the end of the Delta Connection flight from Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. None of the 70 passengers and four crew on board the Embraer 170 were reported injured.
  • On February 27, 2012, a Shuttle America Embraer E-170 aircraft operating as United Express flight 5124 from Atlanta made an emergency landing at Newark Liberty International Airport after the pilots received an unsafe nose gear indication on approach; a fly-by of the tower confirmed the nose gear was retracted. The aircraft subsequently came to rest on runway 22L supported only by its main landing gear. The 66 passengers and 4 crew, none of them injured, were evacuated using slides and bused to the terminal.[7]
  • On June 13, 2013, a Shuttle America Embraer E-170 aircraft departing LaGuardia Airport was involved in a near-miss with a Delta Airlines Boeing 747 arriving at John F. Kennedy International Airport. Both aircraft were turning away from each other when they lost the required separation distance.[8]

References

  1. ICAO8585 Edition 141
  2. "Contact Us." Republic Airways Holdings. Retrieved on May 19, 2009.
  3. Flight International 12–18 April 2005
  4. "Shuttle America Fleet of DH8 (History)". Airfleets. Retrieved 2010-03-25. 
  5. "Mokulele, go! airlines merging". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. 2009-10-13. Retrieved 2009-11-13. 
  6. "Shuttle America fleet". ch-aviation.ch. Retrieved 2013-12-29. 
  7. Airliner Makes Belly Landing at Newark Airport. Airnation.net (2012-02-27). Retrieved on 2013-08-16.
  8. FAA investigates near-miss by 2 planes over NYC. CBS News (2013-06-21). Retrieved on 2013-08-16.

External links

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