Archive for the ‘Portland Maine Airport Transport’ Category

JetBlue nonstops favor Boston over Portland

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

PORTLAND — JetBlue Airways’ ongoing expansion in Boston is bound to siphon off some southern Maine passengers from Portland International Jetport, the airline’s president and chief executive officer acknowledged Thursday.

“If you live south of here and want to fly nonstop, there’s no doubt people will make the drive,” said David Barger.

The best way to limit that trend and encourage JetBlue to bolster its presence in Maine, Barger added, is for Mainers to fly out of Portland.

Barger was in Portland as part of a 10th anniversary tour that’s taking him to each of the 61 cities JetBlue serves. He used the opportunity to talk about how Portland fits into the airline’s growth plans, congestion at JetBlue’s hub in New York City and what type of service will be offered between Portland and Orlando this winter.

Barger visited an airport in the midst of a major expansion, one that has largely weathered the recession and is on track to fly roughly 1.7 million passengers this year, on par with 2009.

Since arriving in Portland four years ago, JetBlue Airways has become a key contributor to the vitality of Maine’s largest airport. It has five daily flights in and out of Portland to its new terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City. It carried 294,000 passengers last year, roughly 17 percent of all Portland traffic.

JetBlue began serving Portland at a critical time. The city had just lost its only low-cost carrier, when Independence Air went under. Many Maine fliers were traveling to Boston, or to Manchester, N.H., to take advantage of discount fares being offered by Southwest Airlines.

The “JetBlue effect,” as it was called, helped reverse those trends. Legacy airlines such as USAirways and Delta began trimming fares to New York City – the jetport’s top destination – as soon as JetBlue’s expansion was announced.

“I don’t think it’s overstating it to say JetBlue made a transformational change at the jetport,” said Steve Hewins, vice president for travel at AAA Northern New England. “I honestly think it has been a major factor in the jetport’s resurgence.”

JetBlue’s flights to New York, and AirTran Airways trips to Baltimore-Washington, D.C., help maintain competition for Portland’s top two destinations, according to Paul Bradbury, the jetport’s director. And while JetBlue isn’t as aggressive with pricing as it once was, in Bradbury’s view, it offers a value experience for many fliers, such as providing video screens on each seat and not charging for the first checked bag.

“They have a very good product at a reasonable price,” he said.

JetBlue has been able to maintain that product at a time when some other airlines have struggled. The publicly-traded company was profitable last year. And while it showed a loss in the first quarter of this year, the airline bounced back in the second quarter with record revenues and highest-ever operating income. It also has been ranked first in overall satisfaction for low-cost airlines for the past six years by J.D. Powers and Associates, just ahead of Southwest.

JetBlue’s competition with Southwest is now unfolding in Boston, where JetBlue recently has become the top carrier at Logan International Airport. JetBlue is constrained from growing much in the busy New York City airspace, and has chosen Boston as a place to diversify its route system. It will begin offering service this November between Boston and Reagan/National in Washington, D.C., Portland’s second most popular destination.

“That’s where the resources are going,” Barger said of Logan.

More travelers are discovering this, Hewins said, which puts more pressure on Portland

Hewins noted this example: A Maine traveler who booked a flight this week to Los Angeles on Sept. 2, could catch an evening flight on JetBlue from Portland through JFK to Long Beach, Calif., for $399. A direct flight from Boston was listed at $296.

“It’s the kind of thing where you could wind up competing against yourself,” Hewins said.

JetBlue’s expansion in Boston is being watched closely by Bradbury.

Average fares at Logan remain higher than those in Portland, he said, but Portland can’t match the schedule frequency or the advantage of direct flights out of Boston. The growth of reliable, hourly bus service between Portland and Logan’s terminals leads some fliers to take advantage of what Boston has to offer, at Portland’s expense.

Bradbury would like to see JetBlue offer a direct flight from Portland to Washington, D.C., but Barger said that won’t make economic sense now. He wants Boston service to mature first.

And Barger said JetBlue is still considering what type of flights will link Portland to Orlando this winter. JetBlue presently offers a direct flight on Saturdays. Last winter it competed with a comparable direct flight offering by AirTran. Maine vacations in Florida also were reduced by the lingering recession.

“It was good, but it wasn’t great,” Barger said of the economics.

Overall, Barger said, Portland performs well for JetBlue, but any future expansion will be driven by sustained demand.

“My message is, we’re looking for local support,” he said.

FAA puts $2.5M into geothermal plant at Portland Jetport

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Maine’s largest geothermal installation began this week at the Portland International Jetport, funded through a $2.5 million grant from the Federal Aviation Administration.

The project is scheduled to be completed in October 2010 and be operational in July 2011. The company behind the project is Norfolk Ram Group LLC, a Plymouth-based environmental engineering firm.

The airport estimates that its oil consumption will be reduced by more than 100,000 gallons per year, reducing energy costs by an estimated 80 percent. The project ultimately will save more than $10 million in oil usage costs during the life of the system, and will pay for itself in three years, according to the airport.

The installation will consist of a total of 120 boreholes, 500 feet deep, adding up to more than 60,000-feet of ground loop coil. The Voluntary Airport Low Emissions program of the FAA is funding the project.

The installation is part of a $75 million terminal expansion project at the airport.

Construction planned at Portland Jetport

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Portland, MAINE (NEWS CENTER) — The Portland International Jetport is preparing for a major face lift.

Plans were presented to the Portland City Council Finance committee on Monday night. The renovation is ambitious. There will be a 137,000 square foot addition to the existing terminal, doubling its size. Three new gates will go in, which will allow another carrier to fly out of the Jetport.

Highlighting the project will be four additional security screening lanes, bringing the total to eight, and new explosive detecting equipment will be provided through a 9 million dollar grant from the Transportation Safety Administration. Jetport Director Paul Bradbury says those additional security lanes will be critical to getting travelers in the air during the busiest time of day.

“Just to service the customers we have now in the peak hours in the morning push, we have insufficient gates and insufficient security screening,” says Bradbury.

The last major renovation of the Jetport took place in 1995, and there have been several smaller projects since. In those 15 years, Jetport usage has gone up by more then 60%. The numbers continue to climbing. While cities like Boston and Manchester have seen a 10% drop in air traffic over the past several years, Portland is up by the same amount.

“The jetport is the economic engine for the region, so its critical that we invest in it its no coincidence that three of the states largest employers are within a stone throw of the jetport,” says Bradbury.

The price tag is high, about 75 million dollars — but none of that money comes out of the city budget. The city council will vote on the plan next month. If passed, construction would begin this spring, lasting for 22 months. The project is expected to employ an average of 100 people per day.

Portland Jetport Losing Service To Nova Scotia

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

PORTLAND, Maine — The Portland Jetport’s only international flight will soon be history.

Starlink Aviation announced Thursday it’s getting rid of its service between Yarmouth and Halifax, Nova Scotia and the Portland Jetport.

The air service was only introduced in February and offered two flights a day. But because of a lack of funding, the flights will be suspended as of Dec. 1.

The airline said it tried to apply for some short-term government funding but were unable to do so.

Starlink said it hopes to resume service at some point in Portland, but isn’t sure when that will be.

It also said passengers who have already bought tickets but have not yet flown will get a refund within three business days.

Portland, Maine, Airport Reports Growth

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) ― Portland International Jetport is reporting its best third quarter ever.

The jetport released figures Thursday showing that 565,208 passengers passed through the facility in July, August and September of this year. That’s nearly 1.5 percent more than for the previous best third quarter, which was recorded in 2008.

But the jetport also says passenger figures to-date this year are down slightly from last year’s. However, officials are optimistic that the numbers will continue to rise as the year ends.

Jetport Director Paul Bradbury said the figures indicate that Portland continues to attract more passengers who once may have used either Boston’s Logan or Manchester airport in New Hampshire.

At jetport, it’s a waiting game

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Short security lines and inexpensive parking distinguish the Portland International Jetport from many other U.S. airports, but the jetport has one of the worst on-time arrival rates in the country.

That’s one of the findings in a report released today by the Brookings Institution, which ranks Portland third-worst among the nation’s 100 biggest metropolitan areas for on-time arrival rates, and 12th-worst for on-time departures.

TOP FIVE FOR LATENESS

Five worst on-time arrival performances among the biggest 100 metro areas. Figures show percentage of on-time arrivals.
1. New York, New Jersey, Long Island 66.3
2. Palm Bay, Melbourne, Titusville, Fla. 69.2
3. Portland, South Portland, Biddeford 73.3
4. Philadelphia, Camden, N.J., Wilmington, Del. 73.4
5. Columbia, S.C.73.6

The study by the nonpartisan public policy research group found that 73.3 percent of flights arrive in Portland on time, compared with the national average of 78.9 percent.

The only areas with lower percentages than Portland’s are New York-New Jersey-Long Island at 66.3 percent on-time arrivals, and Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville in Florida at 69.2 percent.

The average delay in Portland is now 58.6 minutes, up 19 percent from 10 years ago. Departures from Portland are on time 81.3 percent of the time, compared with 83.1 percent nationally, the study says.

It isn’t air traffic in Portland that’s causing the late arrivals and departures, but congestion in New York and other cities that connect with Portland, the study concludes.

“This really means Portland is a slave to the operations going on elsewhere,” said Adie Tomer, a co-author of the report.

Many Portland flights link to cities with some of the worst travel delays, such as New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Miami, Atlanta and San Francisco. Nearly 60 percent of the flights in and out of the jetport connect with New York, Chicago, Philadelphia or Atlanta.

Using Logan International Airport in Boston or Manchester Boston Regional Airport in New Hampshire won’t get you there any faster. The Boston metro area, which includes those two airports, ranks 11th-worst in the country for delays, with only 75 percent of the arrivals on time.

Arrivals in the Boston metro area are delayed an average of 61.3 minutes, even longer on average than Portland, the study shows.

Among the top-rated metro areas for on-time arrivals are Salt Lake City, Phoenix, Detroit and Washington, D.C.

Although delays make life less convenient for passengers, they also highlight the challenges that metropolitan areas face, said Tomer. The study — the first to analyze air travel among metro areas as opposed to individual airports — offers recommendations for reducing delays.

One recommendation is to allow congestion pricing, charging airlines higher landing fees during heavy travel times. Also proposed is privatizing government-owned airports and concentrating high-speed rail investment along the busiest air travel corridors.

Air transportation specialists said the report’s findings don’t surprise them.

The jetport’s director, Paul Bradbury, said demand is for flights to major cities in the Northeast, which tend to be congested. “We are going to the places where people want to go,” he said.

Bradbury said cold weather is another factor, because Portland has limited de-icing capabilities. “The busiest time is 5:45 a.m., and if there is freezing rain, it is hard to get to (all of the planes) instantly,” he said.

Jim Iacono, director of business development for Maine Aviation, said his company’s charter jets avoid the heavily congested airports around New York City, instead meeting their passengers in the small regional airports in Teterboro, N.J., and White Plains, N.Y.

Phil Dube, manager of Dube Cruise and Travel Center in Scarborough, said his clients like to use the Portland airport.

“That is why I pretty much recommend they have at least an hour connecting time in those cities,” he said.

But Godfrey Wood, chief executive officer of the Greater Portland Chamber, said Portland’s ranking surprised him. “I fly a lot through New York, and in the last two years any flight I have taken has arrived right on the money,” he said.

He said the delays apparently have not deterred users of the jetport, which has seen large increases in passengers.

The number of passengers flying into the airport rose 92 percent in the past decade, according to the Brookings report. That is the kind of growth that’s normally seen only in regions with exploding populations, Tomer said.

“They wouldn’t have that growth,” Wood said, “if people weren’t happy with the service.”

Portland jetport hits historic volume

Friday, August 14th, 2009

By The Mainebiz News Staff

Today

Traffic at Portland International Jetport climbed to a record high in July, surpassing 200,000 passengers for the second time in the airport’s history.

The jetport served 202,311 passengers last month, a 2.6% increase over July 2008 that marks the first time this year that volume increased over the corresponding month in 2008, according to a press release. Last year was the jetport’s busiest ever, with 1,760,856 passengers. August 2008 was the first time the airport breached the monthly 200,000 mark.

Airport Director Paul Bradbury attributed July’s increase to airlines’ continued confidence in the jetport and the availability of attractive fares for last-minute bargain hunters. “Our airline partners continue to see the Portland Jetport as an opportunity market,” Bradbury said in the release, adding that several carriers have increased the size of the aircraft operating out of Portland and that AirTran added non-stop daily service to Atlanta.

The passenger count for June was 163,971, the second-best June on record. So far this year, the jetport has served 969,137 passengers, compared to 1,009,676 during the same period in 2008.

Jetport seeks out new Seacoast, York County customers

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

By Dave Choate

dchoate@seacoastonline.com
June 29, 2009 6:00 AM

PORTLAND, Maine — A Portland International Jetport campaign to draw in passengers from around the Seacoast has drawn to a close, but airport officials are hoping its intended effect reverberates through the coming months.

Making use of the Internet, newspapers, the airways and well-known Maine comedian Bob Marley, the jetport sought in recent months to add to its passenger base in a tough time for airlines and airports everywhere, kicking off the campaign early in 2009 when passenger boarding numbers were down about 6 percent, according to jetport Marketing Manager Gregory Hughe

For information, visit www.portlandjetport.org.

The campaign aimed to attract passengers who either don’t fly or who currently travel to Boston for their flights. With that effort concluded for the year, jetport officials said they were cautiously optimistic for growth across the region and in the total number of travelers taking to the skies this summer.

Hughes said there continues to be a focus on advertising in York County, but said the jetport does not currently have funds necessary to put together a study and determine how many more passengers are coming from the targeted areas.

He said staff are hopeful that Maine’s natural attractions, which could make for a cheaper vacation, will prove to be a huge draw as the weather improves.

Airport Director Paul Bradbury said in the spring that the goal was to convince those in southern Maine and Seacoast New Hampshire that a trip to Portland is quicker and easier than a trip to Logan Airport in Boston. Bradbury said the Jetport did so in hopes of tapping into a total of 2.2 million passengers he said the company’s research shows are within the Greater Portland trade area.

The biggest pushes for the campaign were in southern Maine and eastern Rockingham County in New Hampshire, according to Bradbury, who acknowledged that those close to Logan and Manchester-Boston Regional Airport in Manchester, N.H., will still mostly choose to head there, especially for flight paths that Portland doesn’t carry.

He said some of the challenge has come from people who don’t think to drive north if their flight is carrying them south, but noted that those living in Kennebunk or Wells can make a trip to the jetport in less than 45 minutes, while a trip to Boston can take upwards of an hour and 45 minutes. Pitching that distance advantage, plus what he said were cheaper parking rates, will hopefully appeal to the gas and money conscious.

“That’s absolutely the hope,” Bradbury said. “That’s the crux of our campaign.”

That campaign prominently featured the familiar Maine-accented voice of Marley, a comedian whose riffs on Downeast life have made him popular in the area.

Hughes said there was some initial reluctance to make use of Marley — “the airlines, transportation and travel are easy jokes for comedians,” he said — but found last year that he was a frequent flyer and an asset for the marketing effort.

“Our theme this year has been convenience, convenience, convenience,” Hughes said. “He’s a perfect spokesman.”

Hughes said the emphasis was on what he called Portland’s competitive pricing thanks to low-cost airline carriers, ample parking and close proximity to the targeted areas to drive the campaign. He said he realizes that with the current economic climate, people are looking for deals, and hopes those close to Portland will be able to find one at the jetport.

“Everybody wants to get a reasonable airfare. You’d be foolish not to,” Hughes said.

Bradbury acknowledged that airports and airlines alike have struggled through the recession with dips in boarding numbers, with The Portland International Jetport slotted firmly in the middle of the smallest and biggest drops.

“The reality is that our base is shrinking,” Bradbury said at the time. “We need to capture a greater percentage of our market and not lose more.”