PIA - A History: Events of 2002 (Includes Video Slideshow)
AMERICAN CONNECTION (Trans States Airlines)
At the start of 2002, this carrier offered seven weekday departures to St. Louis. Traffic was recovering post-9/11, so it resumed an eighth on January 8. April schedules show a ninth had been added, though newspaper coverage in late-June indicates service had been reduced to seven again. Frequency was brought back up to nine roundtrips on September 4. These flights operated with a mix of 68-seat ATR-72, 48-seat ATR-42 and 29-seat Jetstream 41 turboprops.
AMERICAN EAGLE (American Eagle Airlines)
When 2002 began, weekday departures to Chicago-O'Hare totaled four. Passenger loads had recovered rapidly in late-2001 and through first few months of 2002. By April 6, use of the smaller, 44-seat ERJ-140 had been reduced to a single Sunday morning turnaround. All others were flown on the 50-seat Embraer 145.
Both of American Airlines' two regional affiliates saw market share here drop below 50 percent during 2002. This was a slight decline from a 52.3 percent share in 2001. Traffic grew for the carriers, but competitors saw growth as well, thus American Airlines' affiliates' decline in market share.
DELTA CONNECTION (Atlantic Southeast Airlines)
The effects of 9/11 on Delta Connection's three daily roundtrip Peoria-Atlanta nonstops proved temporary. Service levels were maintained during the brief downturn in traffic.
At the February board meeting, interim director Mary DeVries told officials of her desire for a fourth Atlanta roundtrip. Existing flights were usually booked, as load factors tended to defy the post-9/11 downturn affecting other airports.
That fourth roundtrip would come in time. Meanwhile, the carrier decided to upgrade one roundtrip in September to a 50-seat CRJ200 (all three roundtrips had been using 40-seat versions of the same aircraft).
NORTHWEST AIRLINK (Mesaba Airlines)
The Peoria Journal Star's December 17, 2001 edition reported that Northwest Airlink began a third and fourth roundtrip to Detroit (DTW) and Minneapolis/St. Paul (MSP), respectively. But a Northwest Airlines' timetable, effective January 3 to Febuary 12, 2002, shows four flights from MSP and three to MSP. There were two roundtrip tag-ons between Peoria and Bloomington/Normal (BMI). A fourth MSP flight operated via BMI.
Northwest Airlines' timetable, effective February 13 to April 6, 2002, shows one modification: The MSP-PIA-BMI-MSP itinerary had been changed to MSP-PIA-BMI-DTW. The timetable for the remainder of April shows this itinerary had reverted to MSP-PIA-BMI-MSP. The other PIA-BMI tag-ons were eliminated. Schedules covering May 1 to June 6, 2002 showed only three PIA-MSP and three PIA-DTW roundtrips. These offerings remained stable the rest of the year.
Airport officials made public in February that they had asked the airline for regional jet service (presumably to both Detroit and Minneapolis/St. Paul). But none were available for deployment to Peoria.
Finally, travelers bound for, or connecting through Detroit Metropolitan Airport benefitted from the opening of Northwest Airlines' new Edward H. McNamara "World Gateway" terminal on February 24. The new two million square foot complex featured 97 gates on three concourses and an 11,500-space parking deck.
New federal baggage screening rules went into effect on January 18, when airlines were required to search all checked baggage for explosives. The local airport had already been enforcing these rules for two months, but the prodecures were expected to cause delays at large airports around the nation. The most common method of compliance - baggage matching - threatened to cause chaos with hub-and-spoke operations.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) took over security checkpoint staffing in Seprtember. Congress mandated December 31 as a deadline for installation of bomb-detection equipment at TSA-staffed airports. Local airport officials hoped to have two security checkpoints and six baggage screening stations to comply before the deadline. But TSA was looking to cut that number in half. Airport officials feared delays as a consequence of the more limited facilities, so it needed to relocate the airport's gift shop to make room for a second checkpoint.
The authority reported in the summer that two candidates were in play, and hoped to hire one of them by mid-September. A U. S. Air Force veteran who had run an airport on the east coast was chosen on a 4 to 3 vote, but rejected the employment offer in October.
In February 2002, Raleigh, North Carolina-based MRI Management was hired to do a search for a candidate. In late-June, PIA's candidate accepted an offer. Contractual obligations from a present employer delayed his indentification until July 19.
Good news came in November 2002 when PIA and FedEx entered into a five-year contract to replace a ten-year deal which would expire in Spring 2003. FedEx's continued committment to PIA may have been questioned as its biggest Central Illinois customer was Bloomington-based State Farm Insurance. It could have moved flights to CIRA. FedEx generated 35 million pounds in 2001, and the contract ensured continued operations and employment here for the forseeable future.
At the time the new contract was signed, the Memphis, Tennessee-based carrier employed 70 at PIA and offered 18 weekly flights. Ten of these were five roundtrips between Memphis, Peoria and Madison (WI). The other eight were four roundtrips between Indianapolis, Peoria and Des Moines. Boeing 727-200Cs were used on all flights.
Provisions of the new contract included combining two FedEx cargo buildings into a single 19,600 sq. ft. facility. Tax-free municipal bonds would allow expansion to 50,000 sq. ft. if desired, It was hoped that the FedEx deal would help reverse the decline in air cargo volume. After all, FedEx handled 33,230,604 pounds here in 2002, representing 65.9 percent of the local market.
PIA Director Solomon Balraj desired to enter into such contracts with the other cargo carriers, and help them grow local business. This included Air Cargo Carriers, which flew Shorts 360 turboprops on a Louisville-Peoria-Moline routing and DHL Worldwide, which flew Fairchild Metros on a Cincinnati-Peoria-Moline routing.
Finally, Emery Worldwide Airlines was re-branded as "Menlo Worldwide Logistics" on January 1, 2002. Ryan International Airlines continued operating a Boeing 727-200C under contract to Menlo's Dayton (Ohio) hub. Peoria was usually a stop enroute to an unconfirmed western city (Austin TX, Portland OR, Sacramento CA and Salt Lake City UT were various destinations over several years).
The air show was a major fundraiser for the Prairie Aviation Museum, so organizers negotiated with the Greater Peoria Airport Authority, which proved easily accommodating. This would the first true air show at PIA since 1989.
CIRA hosted a smaller airshow at the old terminal ramp in mid-July, but attendance was disappointing, and the event was not repeated.
This may sound like nitpicking, but perspective is important in journalism. The headline of a January 11 Peoria Journal Star story reads, "Air travel here soars past 400,000." Good news, of course. But then the sub-headline reads, "Ridership at highest level since 1999." While technically true, it lacks context. Analysis of local airport passenger traffic (a better term than "ridership") for the prior decade is important.
Note how traffic dipped below 400,000 in 1994 (chaos created following the October 31, 1994 crash at Roselawn, Indiana was the primary reason). There was a rapid recovery in 1997, thanks to airlines' willingness to compete with Low-Cost Carriers at Bloomington-Normal's Central Illinois Regional Airport (CIRA).
Traffic declined slightly in 1998 and 1999 as AirTran Airways built up service from CIRA to its Atlanta hub. After the AccessAir debacle of 1999, fares surged at PIA and traffic collapsed. That is why traffic in 2000 dipped below 400,000 for the first time in six years. It recovered to slightly above 400,000 in 2001 thanks to fare reductions and new service by Delta Connection to Atlanta.
But 9/11 exposed its dependence on cost-conscious leisure travelers: When you needn't fly, you don't when security becomes an issue. In addition, PIA began to copy some of CIRA's success - free parking. It also convinced airlines to lower fares.
CIRA's growth continued unabated through 2000, peaking that year with 476,063 passengers. Traffic declined in 2001 but still handled a respectable 444,360 passengers. Both events of 9/11 and the consequential three-day ban on flights can be blamed for the decline, but traffic seemed to recover late in 2001. No doubt CIRA was greatly assisted by the opening on November 4, 2001 of a new and spacious terminal building.
April 2002 schedules show the following airline service on weekdays:
- AirTran Airways/3 nonstops to Atlanta (DC-9-30)
- American Connection/7 nonstops to St. Louis (ATR-72, ATR-42, Jetstream 41)
- American Eagle/3 nonstops to Chicago-O'Hare (Embraer 145)
- United Express/3 nonstops to Chicago-O'Hare (Dornier 328)
Shortly after Northwest's mixed bad news/good news announcement, United Express informed CIRA that it would replace its Dornier 328 turboprops with jets by late 2002 or early 2003. The upgrade came early as all three roundtrips converted to CRJ200s on August 4.
AirTran Airways added Saturday-only nonstops to Orlando on November 9. Returning passengers were required to connect at Atlanta, however. The airline had also replaced older DC-9-30s with Boeing 717-200s.
CIRA sought new opportunities to replace lost service. In mid-December, the airport announced a $500,000 annual guarantee to Mesa Air Group to operate two daily roundtrips to Denver as "Frontier Jet Express" starting in February 2003.
When Runway 02-20 opened in 1996, it was 6,400' x 100'. In 1997, it was extended south by 600' to accommodate AirTran Airways 737-200s during the summer months. In Summer 2002, $25 milllion was allocated for extension by another 1,000' (to 8,000') and widening to 150' over a three-year period to accommodate Airborne Express cargo flights.
Overall, 2002 had to be disappointing to CIRA. It handled 411,197 passengers that year. Traffic was a little higher due to a better-than-expected year-end holiday travel season, but was considerably lower than the 600,000 passengers LaPier had hoped for. Adding to the pain, Peoria had re-gained the top spot on passengers and snatched the long-time air show.
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