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PostDec 21, 2020#6176

I like the idea of a shiny new airport. But it still feels like Lambert is just getting its finances in order after the "new" runway boondoggle. I'm hesitant to take on billions in costs and potential overruns and tear the whole place up for a number of years when the airlines are reeling from Covid-19 and (other than Southwest) were not investing too heavily or doing anything too transformative at STL prior to the pandemic. 

Certainly do whatever keeps Southwest happy - more baggage claims, more gates, more parking, etc.... as they've been a great partner for the region and actually seem the best airline of them all to have your fate hitched to right now. But I just don't see the justification for doing anything transformative to accommodate the legacy carriers or to lure new airlines whether domestic (JetBlue, Spirit, Allegiant) or foreign (BA, Lufthansa). 

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PostDec 22, 2020#6177

^First, the plans JShank posted are an older proposal. You can see on them a 2010 date. There was a big study begun back then right after American dehubbed us. I expect these were a part of that.

I feel like I'm banging a worn out drum, but I'm inclined to think the current management has a pretty good handle on things and we're in a spot where we can afford to take things slowly and see how it develops. We're finally back to a point where local landing fees are in line with other medium hubs. I hate to throw that away in some dream to chase big hub status again. I would desperately love to see a big hub here again, but I don't think a new building is what makes it happen. I don't think AA killed the hub because we were short on gates, amenities, hold areas . . . I think they killed it because we were short on passengers, and especially business passengers. Business has been picking up of late. It's not where it was in the 80s, but it's picking up. Traffic had been expanding nicely to a point where thinking about expanding made sense, but the pandemic probably pushes everything back a couple of years. Hopefully once we get out of this, the upward trend will continue or even accelerate.

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PostDec 22, 2020#6178

If you must fly

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PostDec 22, 2020#6179

symphonicpoet wrote:
Dec 22, 2020
I don't think AA killed the hub because we were short on gates, amenities, hold areas . . . I think they killed it because we were short on passengers, and especially business passengers. 
Got to differ with you here. The biggest factor in AA's shuttering of the Lambert hub was that it was redundant. 

AA acquired TWA in April 2001, and with the TWA acquisition came the STL TWA hub. But, AA already had two hubs in the central US: DFW and ORD. They were never going to get rid of DFW, as AA is based in Dallas. ORD was already established for AA, and Chicago's a bigger city than Saint Louis. Plus, I'm pretty sure DFW and ORD were 2 of the 3 busiest airports in the US at the time (along with ATL, with its Delta hub). Then, 5 months after their TWA acquisition, was September 11, 2001, and the nightmares of that day (with 2 AA planes lost that day), all flights grounded, and the industry's future left uncertain. TWA was still flying under its own tail into December 2001. Amidst all of this, AA saw their maintaining 3 central US hubs being redundant. While I hate to say this, it really made strategic sense for them to de-hub STL, especially as it was not originally an AA hub. STL became a regional service airport in November 2003, going from 800 daily flights to only 200, and was officially de-hubbed as that in September 2009. 

There has been some talk by certain C-Suite leadership at AA that they maybe de-hubbed STL too much, that the airline could benefit from increased capacities here. Plus, ORD remains most dedicated to UA, which is HQ'd in Chicago. While I don't think AA would dump their ORD hub for STL, it's a valid consideration; they could see value being the biggest fish in a medium-sized pond rather than being the second-biggest fish in a large pond (and especially one that freezes every winter). 

Two other factors to consider... 
1. STL was a great hub airport, in that it served as a connecting airport. It operated as a hub not for the population of Metro STL but as a base of operations. The new runway was built with this wholly in mind*. STL definitely has excess capacities today. 
* The higher aeronautical costs (takeoffs, landings, and gating) to pay for the new runway, which was built to further the efficacies of the hub operating here, inadvertently led to the hub being taken away. That's irony. 
2. The decrease in Saint Louis' corporate HQ strength was in no small part an effect of the de-hubbing of STL. Rather, the decrease in relative strength of the region as a HQ location for Fortune 500 companies correlates to the loss of STL's hub. We absolutely weren't short on business passengers prior to the airport's loss of hub status. Let's make sure not to put the cart before the horse here. 

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PostDec 23, 2020#6180

gone corporate wrote:
Dec 22, 2020
Got to differ with you here. The biggest factor in AA's shuttering of the Lambert hub was that it was redundant. 
I don't think we really do disagree, I think we just said similar things in different ways. They had too many hubs (or at least they felt they did at the time) and so they killed the one that had the least O&D. The redundancy meant they got to pick who got the axe, but the reason it fell on us and not Chicago or Dallas was all about passengers and not about gates and hold areas. (And you're right, they're not going to consider closing Dallas, but I don't think it's about sentiment. I think it's about the fact that they've built themselves a tidy little fortress there and it's not too likely anyone will ever crack it. It was a hub long before it was the HQ, much like St. Louis to TWA. And it was an important station in the right geographic spot before it was a hub. Again, much like St. Louis to TWA.)

As to the rest, I'm quite aware it was a hub and what that means. I spent a good part of my youth lolly-gagging around that airport and I'm more than just a bit of an aviation buff. No expert, but probably not a completely uninformed yokel either. And no, hubs don't require O&D. They're there for the connections. But a hub with good O&D is better than one with mediocre O&D, all other things considered. And the bleeding had started long before TWA. Southwestern Bell moved to Texas in 1990. Boatmen's was bought out in 1996. McDonnell Douglas in 1997. Monsanto and Mercantile in 1999. Ralston Purina in 2001 . . . the list goes on. Did we have business travel in 2008 when AA shut us down? Sure. Was it like the 80s? I really can't believe that. I will not argue that the loss of the hub accelerated the process, but I have to think the ongoing decline was a factor in AA's decision. And now that we're maybe starting to bounce back it's not too surprising they might reconsider. (Albeit probably too late to really pull the big orange weed which is such a perpetual thorn in their very specific side.)

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PostDec 23, 2020#6181

Realizing from what you guys are saying that not a single legacy carrier has more than two hubs in the Midwest+Texas. Southwest has three "operating bases", two in Texas and one in Chicago.


Industry consolidation has resulted in a rich history of midwestern hubs being closed: St. Louis (AA), Cincinnati (Delta), Cleveland (United), Pittsburgh (US Airways), Milwaukee (Airtran & Midwest). And the near South - Memphis (Delta), Nashville (AA). These markets just aren't competed over the way they used to be. Kind of surprising Minneapolis and Detroit have bother held out for Delta. they're sort of outliers at this point with everyone else in either Chicago or Texas. I guess that's worked for them. 

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PostDec 23, 2020#6182

Symphonic: I dig what you're saying. Cheers to that. Concurrently, I do think that the biggest detriment to STL getting larger corporations to locate new operations here is our airport's lack of a major carrier besides SWA. If we still had somewhere between 200 and 800 flights here, I bet we'd see more corporate growth. 

For consideration... Clayco indicated that their relocation to Chicago was in part driven by ORD. Chicago also was the recipient of two major corporate relocations from IL: Caterpillar (Peoria) and Archer-Daniels-Midland (Decatur). While Saint Louis competed with Chicago for both of these, I have to think a significant part of their reasons to choose Chicago was ORD. And, I bet Centene's liking of Charlotte wouldn't be so strong if not for CLT's continued operation as a "fortress hub" for AA (after their USAir acquisition). I'm not stating there's direct causation, but it is definitely an ancillary factor. 

Wabash: You're quite right here. The central US is severely lacking in airport hubs today. The "hub and spoke" model has overwhelmingly benefitted the coasts, leaving most airports from the Appalachians to the Rockies with excess capacities. 

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PostDec 23, 2020#6183

STL needs to overpay for a London flight ASAP. Get that monkey off our back. Then approach a legacy carrier about a mini hub. I know it all sounds pie-in-the-sky but it needs to be A1 priority.

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PostDec 23, 2020#6184

How do we convince tbe state to subsidize one?

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PostDec 23, 2020#6185

^ The state won’t (and it shouldn’t). Then they’d have to play favorites with the state’s two primary airports. The regional business community needs to take the lead on that. And they did at one point. Pre-pandemic Neidorff mentioned that he believed had it not been for the pandemic STL would have seen a European announcement by now. He was apparently involved in that as well.

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PostDec 23, 2020#6186

whitherSTL wrote:
Dec 23, 2020
STL needs to overpay for a London flight ASAP. Get that monkey off our back. Then approach a legacy carrier about a mini hub.  I know it all sounds pie-in-the-sky but it needs to be A1 priority.
Frankfurt would make more sense, given the potential instability caused by Brexit and the fact that we have more ties with German than British companies. But Lufthansa is way more conservative than BA in terms of American destinations.

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PostDec 23, 2020#6187

kipfilet wrote:
whitherSTL wrote:
Dec 23, 2020
STL needs to overpay for a London flight ASAP. Get that monkey off our back. Then approach a legacy carrier about a mini hub.  I know it all sounds pie-in-the-sky but it needs to be A1 priority.
Frankfurt would make more sense, given the potential instability caused by Brexit and the fact that we have more ties with German than British companies. But Lufthansa is way more conservative than BA in terms of American destinations.
Condor is much more realistic.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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PostDec 23, 2020#6188

kipfilet wrote:
Dec 23, 2020
whitherSTL wrote:
Dec 23, 2020
STL needs to overpay for a London flight ASAP. Get that monkey off our back. Then approach a legacy carrier about a mini hub.  I know it all sounds pie-in-the-sky but it needs to be A1 priority.
Frankfurt would make more sense, given the potential instability caused by Brexit and the fact that we have more ties with German than British companies. But Lufthansa is way more conservative than BA in terms of American destinations.
Frankfurt also makes more sense because you got a lot of Bosnians going Chicago/Detroit to Germany to Bosnia/Croatia.

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PostDec 24, 2020#6189

^Gone Corporate, yeah, I think we mostly agree that losing the hub has been a real thorn in our side, and that WN, while lovely, isn't a real substitute for a legacy carrier.

And yes, we need a European flight desperately. Though I'm now inclined to agree we should go EU and not UK. (I have an interesting anecdote about that. My brother managed to fly back and forth between the US and UK not once but two and a half times this year. In the late spring, in the summer, and finally a one way in the fall. Not once could he get a direct flight between the US and UK. London-Schiphol-DFW. Philadelphia-Schiphol-London. London-Schiphol-Boston, Detroit-Schiphol-London . . . Maybe he was doing something funny. I did find it absurdly strange that on both Delta and American itineraries he had connections in Amsterdam. Delta partners with KLM so that kind of makes sense. But the American itinerary through Amsterdam was doubly weird. There is something decidedly odd going on here when the EU has harsher restrictions on entry right now than the UK but it's still easier, or maybe only possible to fly direct to the EU. There must be a story here, though I'm not sure I have not the time or inclination to sort it out.)

Anyway . . . sorry about that. Just a funny airline story in a difficult time. But I am inclined to think Brexit makes an EU gateway the more attractive option by far.

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PostDec 24, 2020#6190

Is there an opportunity for a seasonal flight to Europe -- even twice weekly charters at first -- to get the ball rolling?  April through December?

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PostDec 24, 2020#6191

gary kreie wrote:Is there an opportunity for a seasonal flight to Europe -- even twice weekly charters at first -- to get the ball rolling?  April through December?
Condor is a german carrier/partner of Lufthansa. They fit that bill

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PostDec 25, 2020#6192

ldai_phs wrote:
Dec 24, 2020
gary kreie wrote:Is there an opportunity for a seasonal flight to Europe -- even twice weekly charters at first -- to get the ball rolling?  April through December?
Condor is a german carrier/partner of Lufthansa. They fit that bill
Eurowings makes more sense to me if we are talking Germany. They are owned by Lufthansa. They should be their version of Condor.

Lufthansa is cutting feeder agreements with Condor June 2021.

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PostJan 14, 2021#6193

1991 TWA widebody flight to STL.



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PostJan 17, 2021#6194

In today’s NY Times:
Air cargo construction is booming, thanks to Amazon
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/12/busi ... e=Homepage

What is St. Louis doing wrong that Cincinnati is doing right in terms of attracting all these cargo operations? St. Louis is bigger, more centrally-located and better connected via rail and interstates than Cincy, yet CVG is pouncing Lambert as a cargo hub. And it’s hardly just Amazon that has chosen Cincinnati- as a business owner who orders stock apparel on a daily basis, I can tell you first hand that the majority of our vendors have major warehouse facilities in Cincinnati. St. Louis, in the center of the country, does not. WHY? To me, this seems like a low-hanging fruit and STL seems to be asleep at the wheel. Really discouraging that we seem to be completely passed over amidst a burgeoning, rapidly-expanding cargo industry.

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PostJan 17, 2021#6195

Intangibles?  Really just shooting from the hip but our reputation and even how many here perceive oursleves?  I remember an article from Bill McClellan many years ago that stated we should be worried about Cinci.  I think it dated back to when Federated (Macy's) bought May Department stores.  I think there was more of that going on - Cnci corporations acquiring ours.  We seem to be "OK" with where we are not not be proactive.  Perhaps this is all perception, but certainly my opinion.

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PostJan 17, 2021#6196

^^ I thought this was talked about here recently...didn’t Cincinnati and Ohio give Amazon a sh*t load of subsidies for this?  Free handouts and subsidies are how you get that company’s attention.

Just looked.  $40 million in state and local incentives and an additional $5 million from the airport itself.  There’s your answer.

^ I always find it funny listening to the old guys like McClellan blame St. Louis for corporate relocations and mergers...like it’s the city’s fault the feds have been destroying anti-trust protections since the Reagan years.  And then when an STL company acquires a company from another city...crickets...lol.  Maybe someone should tell McClellan that Macy's shuttered its Cincy HQ last year (consolidated HQ is now in NYC), laid off over 500 people and this was after shuttering the flagship in Fountain Square in 2018.  Macy's was one of two Fortune 500s that left Cincy last year.

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PostJan 17, 2021#6197

Bob Clark of Clayco was talking about the Cincinnati thing on Donnybrook a few months ago.

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PostJan 17, 2021#6198

sc4mayor wrote:
Jan 17, 2021
^^ I thought this was talked about here recently...didn’t Cincinnati and Ohio give Amazon a sh*t load of subsidies for this?  Free handouts and subsidies are how you get that company’s attention.

Just looked.  $40 million in state and local incentives and an additional $5 million from the airport itself.  There’s your answer.

^ I always find it funny listening to the old guys like McClellan blame St. Louis for corporate relocations and mergers...like it’s the city’s fault the feds have been destroying anti-trust protections since the Reagan years. And then when a STL companies acquires a company from another city...crickets. Lol.
Whatever is behind it, it seems like their gamble paid off. Cincinnati has succeeded in establishing itself as a premiere cargo center, and is getting all the buzz that goes along with it. Most industries don’t need two Midwest freight hubs, so do you think St. Louis’s efforts at this point are rather futile? It seems apparent that our ship has already sailed (pun intended).

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PostJan 17, 2021#6199

^ I don't totally disagree, but I also don't agree with throwing tons of public cash at a trillion dollar company to create what will almost assuredly be low wage, low productivity jobs.

Good for them on getting some "buzz" (though I've literally seen nothing about this or even Cincinnati outside of this discussion).  I don't agree that our ship has sailed either...especially when you consider all the work the Regional Freightway is doing around the region to update and expand our infrastructure locally.

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PostJan 17, 2021#6200

^Thanks for talking me off the ledge! By “buzz” I’m also referring to the growth of distribution warehouses that have popped up in Cincinnati over the last few years. But I agree with your points and as most of you know, I’ll never stop believing in this city.

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