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Wikipedia

Alaska Airlines

Alaska Airlines is a major American airline headquartered in SeaTac, Washington, within the Seattle metropolitan area. It is the fifth-largest airline in North America when measured by scheduled passengers carried. Alaska, together with its regional partners Horizon Air and SkyWest Airlines, operates a route network primarily focused on connecting cities along the West Coast of the United States to over 100 destinations in the contiguous United States, Belize, Canada, Costa Rica, Guatemala, and Mexico.

Alaska Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
AS ASA ALASKA
FoundedApril 14, 1932; 91 years ago (1932-04-14) (as McGee Airways)
Commenced operationsJune 6, 1944; 79 years ago (1944-06-06)[1]
AOC #ASAA802A[2]
Hubs
Focus cities
Frequent-flyer programMileage Plan
AllianceOneworld
Fleet size305
Destinations117
Parent companyAlaska Air Group
HeadquartersSeaTac, Washington
Key people
FounderLinious "Mac" McGee
Employees22,918 (Oct. 2022)[4]
Websitealaskaair.com

The airline operates out of five hubs, with its primary hub being at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport.[5] Alaska Airlines is a member of Oneworld, the third-largest airline alliance in the world.[6] As of 2020, the airline employs over 16,000 people and has been ranked by J. D. Power and Associates as having the highest customer satisfaction of the traditional airlines for twelve consecutive years.[7]

History Edit

Early years (1932–1945) Edit

 
A Stinson "S" Junior aircraft of McGee Airways: McGee Airways was the precursor to present-day Alaska Airlines.

McGee Airways, a precursor to Alaska Airlines, was established by Linious "Mac" McGee and flew its first service between Anchorage and Bristol Bay.[8] Service was unscheduled, with flights taking off when passengers or a load of cargo or mail needed passage.[9]

The airline struggled financially during the Great Depression. Too many airlines were in Anchorage at the time, with not enough demand to support them. The first of these mergers was in 1934, when McGee sold his namesake airline for US$50,000 (equivalent to $1,093,781 in 2022) to Star Air Service, an airline also located in Anchorage. This allowed McGee to enter the mining industry.[10] With a fleet of 15 aircraft, Star Air Service was a dominant airline in Alaska, but Star continued to struggle financially because of high maintenance costs for its wood-and-fabric planes.[11]

In 1937, McGee came back to the airline and opened a liquor store, and the airline began flying liquor to remote Alaskan communities. That year, Star Air Service purchased Alaska Interior Airlines and was incorporated as Star Air Lines.[9] Star was again sold later that year to a group of miners.[10]

In 1938, federal regulation began when Congress created the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), which awarded the airline most of the routes that it wanted in Alaska, but the coveted route between Seattle and Anchorage was awarded to Pan American Airways.[11]

In 1941, Star Air Service was purchased by Raymond Marshall, a businessman from New York City. In 1942, the airline purchased three other airlines in Alaska, Lavery Air Service, Mirow Air Service, and Pollack Flying Service, as well as a hangar at the Anchorage airport. That year, the airline's name was changed to Alaska Star Airlines.[11] The name Alaska Airlines was adopted on May 2, 1944, having narrowly beaten a competitor who was also applying for the name.[8] In the 1940s, Alaska's headquarters were in Anchorage.[12]

When the United States entered World War II in December 1941, Alaska Airlines faced a shortage of pilots. During the war, the airline lacked funds and equipment, and pilots were often forced to buy fuel for their planes out of their own pockets. The company, which was frequently subjected to lawsuits, also went through many different presidents during this time. In 1943, Alaska Airlines purchased the Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar, its first multi-engine aircraft. That same year, the company's stock was traded for the first time on the American Stock Exchange.[10][11]

Expansion after World War II (1945–1949) Edit

 
An Alaska Airlines Douglas DC-3, one of the aircraft purchased by the airline after World War II

In 1945, Alaska Airlines hired its first stewardesses.[11] In 1947, jockey James Wooten became president of the airline and he began to expand the airline greatly.[11][12] Under his leadership, the company purchased many surplus military aircraft from the government that were used during World War II. The airline purchased Douglas DC-3s, Douglas DC-4s, and Curtiss-Wright C-46 Commandos.[8] Alaska Airlines was the first carrier certified to operate DC-3s on skis.[10]

Alaska Airlines' large charter business made it profitable, and the airline moved its base of operations to Paine Field, an airport north of Seattle. It kept a branch office in Anchorage, however. Despite its success, Alaska Airlines' worldwide charter business was short-lived. In 1949, the CAB tightened its regulations and placed heavy fines on the airline and shut it down completely for safety violations. The airline was prohibited from operating worldwide charter flights, and president James Wooten left the company.[10][11] Also in 1949, Alaska Air began operating five Bell 47B helicopters in order to support oil exploration on the North Slope thus becoming the first airline in Alaska to operate rotary-wing aircraft.[13]

In 1949, the airline was a major participant in an effort by the newly established state of Israel to airlift Jews out of Yemen to Israel in what became known as Operation Magic Carpet. C-46 or DC-4 aircraft were used for the nearly 3,000-mile flight, made necessary to avoid overflying Arab nations. Planes flew from Eritrea to Aden, then along the Gulf of Aqaba to Tel Aviv. After unloading the refugees, crews then immediately continued to Cyprus, afraid to stay on the ground in Tel Aviv for fear of being bombed. Some 49,000 Yemenite Jews were airlifted by Alaska Airlines and other carriers without a single loss of life.[14]

New leadership (1950s) Edit

Alaska Airlines started the 1950s without its worldwide charter business and operations restricted to the state of Alaska. In 1950, it purchased two smaller Alaskan airlines, Collins Air Service and Al Jones Airways.[11]

Though the airline had grown much under the ownership of Raymond Marshall, the CAB forced him out in 1951 due to continuing financial troubles. Also, Marshall had owned Alaska Airlines with the intent of getting money for himself and he was not concerned about the long-term stability of the company.[11] In 1951, the CAB awarded Alaska Airlines with a temporary certificate allowing them to operate on routes from the Alaskan cities of Anchorage and Fairbanks to Seattle and Portland in the contiguous United States; this award would become permanent in 1957.[9][10]

In 1952, the CAB appointed Nelson David as president, and he began to improve the financial stability of the airline. By 1957, with the carrier in a better financial situation, David left and Charles Willis, Jr., became the company's new president and CEO. A pilot during World War II, Willis introduced several marketing gimmicks that set the airline apart from other ones of the day. Under his leadership, Alaska Airlines became the first to show inflight movies. The company began service with the Douglas DC-6, the airline's first pressurized plane, enabling flights above clouds and weather disturbances. On these DC-6s, the airline introduced "Golden Nugget" service, which included an on-board saloon and piano.[11]

Jet age (1960s) Edit

 
The Convair 880 was Alaska Airlines' first jet aircraft.

In 1961, competitors began introducing jets on routes Alaska Airlines flew. To counter this competition, Willis negotiated with aircraft manufacturer Convair to purchase a Convair 880 jetliner with no money down for use on routes between Alaska and the contiguous United States. The company introduced the new jet aircraft the same year. In 1966 the company received its first Boeing 727-100 jets and removed the Convair 880 from the fleet as a financing condition by Boeing concerning the purchase of the 727 jetliners. Several of Alaska's first 727s were series 100C models which could be operated either as all cargo freighters, in an all passenger configuration or as mixed passenger/freight combi aircraft. In the spring of 1967, greatly increased passenger loads required quick addition of fleet aircraft and Alaska purchased a Convair 990 jetliner formerly operated by Brazilian air carrier Varig as PP-VJE which then became Alaska Airlines N987AS. This aircraft remained in service along with an increased fleet of Boeing 727-100's which were then joined by stretched Boeing 727-200s which in turn became Alaska Airlines' signature aircraft for the next 25 years. It also became the first carrier to fly the Lockheed L-100 Hercules (L382 model), the civil version of the military C-130 cargo turboprop, which was used to transport oil drilling rigs to Alaska's North Slope and later to Ecuador.[9] Alaska also owned Lockheed Constellation propliners including two Lockheed L-1649A Starliners from 1962 to 1968, and three L-1049's which were used for Military Air Transport Service operations.[citation needed] Smaller prop and turboprop aircraft were also operated, including the Convair 240, de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter and Super Catalina amphibian aircraft as well as two versions of the Grumman Goose amphibian aircraft, one with piston engines and the other model being a conversion to turboprop engines which the airline called the "Turbo-Goose".[15] The Catalina and Grumman amphibian seaplane aircraft joined the fleet when the airline acquired local southeast Alaska operator Alaska Coastal Airlines in 1968.

 
A Boeing 727-100 at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport. The airline introduced this type in the mid-1960s.

During this time, Alaska Air faced some tough competition from other airlines, such as Northwest Airlines, Pan Am, and Pacific Northern Airlines, an Alaska-based air carrier operating Boeing 720 jetliners that was subsequently acquired by and merged into Western Airlines in 1967. Northwest and Pan Am at different times operated Boeing 747 wide-body jetliners on their services to Alaska with Northwest flying Seattle–Anchorage nonstop with the jumbo jet and Pan Am flying Seattle–Fairbanks nonstop with the 747. To set itself apart from the competition, Alaska Air turned to some cheap but imaginative gimmicks such as having safety instructions read as rhymes, staging fashion shows in the aisles, and having bingo games on board while en route.[11]

In December 1962, Air Guinée signed a contract with Alaska Airlines, which had the latter company providing management expertise, in addition to two Douglas DC-4s. The deal would have had Alaska Airlines contracting with the airline over a seven-year period, but the contract ended after only six months, leading to the United States Agency for International Development paying a US$700,000 debt owed by the Guinean airline to Alaska Airlines.[16]

In 1965, Alaska Airlines turned over some routes between small Alaskan communities, and some smaller aircraft, to Wien Air Alaska. This allowed Alaska to focus on more heavily traveled routes and allowed them to sell off smaller aircraft.[10]

Throughout the 1960s, Alaska Airlines worked to promote tourism to Alaska by offering charter flights to the continental United States. In an attempt to increase the state's appeal, Alaska Airlines conducted a promotional tour of Japan in 1963. In 1967, as the state of Alaska celebrated its centennial, Alaska Airlines introduced a promotional "Gay Nineties" theme with stewardesses dressed in Edwardian outfits. That year, Alaska Airlines expanded to southeast Alaska with the introduction of service to Sitka. This led to the purchase of two smaller airlines, Alaska Coastal Airlines and Cordova Airlines, in 1968.[11]

Economic hardship (1970s) Edit

 
A Boeing 727-200Adv on approach to Los Angeles International Airport, showing the new livery and logo introduced in the early 1970s

In the beginning of the 1970s, Alaska Airlines began Boeing 707 charter flights to Siberia in the Soviet Union.[13] This was the result of three years of secret negotiations between Alaska Airlines and Soviet authorities, in which the US Department of State reluctantly chose not to block the plan for fear of a potentially negative response from the Soviets. The airline gained permission to fly more than two dozen flights in 1970, 1971, and 1972.[10][11] Alaska Airlines was also operating Boeing 707, Boeing 720, and Boeing 720B jetliners in scheduled passenger service between destinations in Alaska and Seattle during the early and mid-1970s.

The airline, though, was not in good financial shape at that time. Like much of the airline industry, Alaska Airlines was hit with rising fuel and operating costs and was on the verge of bankruptcy.[8] Revenues were significantly reduced when work on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System was delayed. The airline's cargo aircraft had played a key role in building the pipeline, but now sat idle. The airline took another blow on September 4, 1971, when a Boeing 727-100 jetliner crashed on landing in Juneau, killing 111 people and resulting in America's worst single-plane crash at the time. Because the airline was struggling financially, the airline's board ousted president and CEO Charles Willis. Former board member Ronald Cosgrave succeeded him. The airline was US$22 million in debt when Cosgrave took over, so Cosgrave began to make major cuts. The airline's cargo business was dropped completely, as were many flights and employees. Cosgrave also sought to improve the airline's tarnished image of "Elastic Airlines" (referring to its poor schedule keeping). The logo was changed to an image of a smiling Inuit man, which remains today. Although the exact identity of the man is unknown, some believe it to be the face of either Chester Seveck, a reindeer herder in Kotzebue, or Oliver Amouak, an Inupiat man. Both were Alaskan natives.[17] As a result of these efforts, the airline made a profit in 1973 and continued to be profitable thereafter.[11]

Post-deregulation expansion (1978–1990) Edit

Alaska Airlines was one of only three US carriers that supported the 1978 Airline Deregulation Act, knowing that it would reap significant growth and other benefits from deregulation.[9] After deregulation, the company's real-estate division was spun off into its own company, with Cosgrave becoming its chairman. Leadership of the airline was passed to Bruce Kennedy, a close associate of Cosgrave. Cosgrave made an alliance with Alaska Airlines to purchase competitor Wien Air Alaska, but this ultimately failed and resulted in fines for Alaska Air and its leaders for improprieties during the attempted acquisition. Wien Air was liquidated in 1984, and never merged into Alaska Airlines.[11]

At the time of deregulation, Alaska Airlines served ten cities in Alaska and one in the contiguous US—the city of Seattle—and it had only ten planes in its fleet.[9] Immediately after deregulation, the airline began to expand, adding the cities of Portland and San Francisco to its network. Soon later, the airline resumed services to the Alaskan cities Nome and Kotzebue, and it also introduced service to Palm Springs, California. Burbank and Ontario were added in 1981.[9][11] In 1979, Alaska also studied the possibility of acquiring and merging with Hughes Air West, however, this never came to fruition. Other cities in the continental US that were added to the airline's route map by 1985 were Oakland and San Jose in California, Spokane in Washington, Boise in Idaho, and Phoenix and Tucson in Arizona.[9]

Deregulation also brought challenges to the airline, however. The airline was faced with increased competition and inflation that put tremendous pressure on costs, profits, and salaries. By 1979, competitors Northwest Airlines and Western Airlines were both flying wide-body McDonnell Douglas DC-10 jets on the core Anchorage–Seattle nonstop route with additional competition being provided by Wien Air Alaska which had begun flying nonstop jet service between Anchorage and Seattle.[18] Northwest was operating nonstop DC-10 service on the Fairbanks–Seattle route at this time as well.[18] There were also tensions with unions, particularly mechanics and flight attendants.[8] In 1985, the company had a three-month-long strike with its machinists. By June the same year, it was able to end the strike by promising to reduce labor costs and maintain peace with unions. In November 1985, the airline introduced a daily air-freight service called Gold Streak with service to and from Alaska.[11]

 
Alaska Airlines was the launch customer for the MD-83 and operated many of these jets throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

In the 1980s, Alaska Airlines began acquiring McDonnell Douglas MD-80s to replace its aging 727s. Alaska was the launch customer for the MD-83, taking delivery of its first MD-80s in 1985.[19]

Also in 1985, the Alaska Air Group was formed as a holding company for Alaska Airlines. In 1986 Alaska Air Group acquired regional airline Horizon Air, which remained a separate brand from Alaska Airlines; since then, both airlines have been subsidiaries of Alaska Air Group. In 1987, Alaska Airlines purchased Jet America Airlines.[20][21] Alaska initially operated Jet America as a separate airline, but this proved economically unviable and Jet America's operations were merged into Alaska's. Alaska also discontinued all flights to the Midwest and the East coast formerly operated by Jet America.[22] Additional MD-80s entered the fleet via the acquisition of Jet America Airlines in 1987.[23]

There was also a big seasonal imbalance in travel to Alaska, which mainly took place in the summer. In an effort to compensate for this, the airline introduced service to Mexican resorts, where most travel takes place in the winter. In 1988, the airline began servicing the Mexican resort cities of Mazatlán and Puerto Vallarta. By the end of the 1980s, 70 percent of Alaska Airlines' passengers flew south of Seattle and the airline served 30 cities in 6 states outside Alaska. The airline had successfully used the state of Alaska as a springboard to expand into larger, more profitable markets.[11]

New competition, new technologies (1990s) Edit

 
An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-400 landing at Vancouver International Airport

The airline began the 1990s with plans to lease 24 Boeing 737-400s from International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC).[11] The first aircraft was delivered in April 1992.[24]

In 1991, Alaska Airlines added several routes. In the Russian Far East, it added the cities of Magadan and Khabarovsk, as well as service to Toronto, its first Canadian city and the first city east of the Rocky Mountains. However, Toronto was later dropped in 1992[11] and the Russian destinations in 1998.[25]

As the airline marked its 19th consecutive year of profits in a turbulent industry and racked up many awards for customer service, Bruce Kennedy retired in May 1991 and was succeeded by Raymond J. Vecci.[11]

Alaska Airlines also faced increased competition from low-cost carriers. One carrier that competed with Alaska was MarkAir. Since it began operating in 1984, competition had been reduced because it had worked out feeder agreements with Alaska Airlines. However, after Alaska Air declined to buy the airline in the fall of 1991, it intensified competition with Alaska. Mark Air offered low-cost service on the Anchorage-Seattle route and other routes in Alaska, where Alaska Airlines earned almost one-third of its revenues. This hurt Alaska Airlines; for the first time in 20 years, it posted a loss of US$121 million. To save money, the airline canceled two proposed maintenance facilities and deferred a large aircraft purchase worth US$2 billion. It was able to increase utilization on its existing planes, though. The airline also cut labor costs, but this ended up making relations with unions tense.[11]

The cost reductions produced quick results. In 1993, their losses decreased to US$45 million and they made a US$40 million profit the next year. Eight percent of these revenues were generated by record-setting cargo operations.[11]

Alaska had more competition in 1993 when low-cost airline Southwest Airlines entered the Pacific Northwest by purchasing Morris Air. Nevertheless, Alaska Airlines was able to keep its costs down, but it maintained its high level of customer service. The airline also promoted itself as "the last great airline" and with the motto "For the same price, you just get more", yet analysts felt that Alaska Air needed deeper cost cuts.[9][11] At the same time, the company had many strikes by the flight attendants' union.[11]

Alaska continued to take delivery of new MD-83s during the 1990s, both to meet the demands of a growing route system, and to replace its aging and fuel inefficient 727 fleet. Their last 727 was retired in March 1994.[26] The airline's MD-80 fleet peaked at 44 aircraft in 1996.[27]

Vecci was dismissed in 1995 and replaced with John Kelly, the former Horizon Air CEO. The airline soon expanded West Coast routes to take advantage of an "open skies" agreement between the US and Canada.[11]

Alaska Airlines also pioneered some new technologies through the 1990s. It added a heads-up guidance system in 1989 to operate better in foggy conditions, becoming the first airline to use this technology. In 1995, the airline became the first U.S. airline to sell tickets on the Internet. By 2000, all the airline's planes carried automated external defibrillators, for use in in-flight emergencies. The airline also installed self-service kiosks called "Instant Travel Machines" that printed boarding passes, allowing customers to bypass the traditional ticket counter. An X-ray device, an addition to the unit allowing passengers to check their own baggage was being tested in 1999 at Anchorage.[11] This concept, known as "Airport of the Future" by the airline, was first tested in Anchorage and was later brought to its Seattle hub, and it drew attention from other airlines as well.[10] The airline would also become the first airline in the world to integrate GPS and Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System (EGPWS) technology, adding a real-time, three-dimensional display of terrain. The system was operational in all the carrier's Boeing 737-400s by April 1999.[11]

The late 1990s also saw the carrier recording much profitability. The airline added new training and maintenance facilities.[11] Also, the airline began buying new 737s, ordering three Boeing 737-700s and becoming the launch customer for the Boeing 737-900 when it placed an order for ten of the jets in November 1997.[28][29]

Introducing flights across the U.S. (2000s) Edit

 
An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-900 at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport. Alaska was the launch customer of the 737-900 aircraft.

With the delivery of Boeing 737 Next Generation aircraft starting in 1999, Alaska began launching more medium-haul flights. In 2000, Alaska started service between Anchorage and Chicago.

On May 15, 2001, the airline took delivery of its first 737-900.[30] In 2001, the airline was granted slot exemptions by the Department of Transportation to operate a nonstop flight from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to Seattle, but it was halted after only a week due to the September 11 attacks. The airline resumed service to Reagan Airport on December 4, 2001, to meet the demand.[31]

In January 2002, William Ayer was named CEO of Alaska Airlines. Ayer had been serving as president under Kelly since 1997, having come to Alaska from Horizon two years earlier after spending 13 years with the smaller airline. Ayer took over as chairman and CEO of the Alaska in 2002 upon Kelly's retirement. He led the company through a transformation called Alaska 2010 that was intended to insulate the airline from the traditional boom-bust cycle of the airline industry.[10]

In 2002, flights to Newark, New Jersey, were launched and in 2003, services to Orlando began.[32][33][34] In 2003, service to Boston began.[35]

In 2003, Alaska Airlines won the Technology Leadership Award from the magazine Air Transport World for its pioneering of new technologies both in the airport and within the airplane itself.[10]

 
The Boeing 737-800 replaced the airline's MD-83s, which were retired in August 2008.

In 2005, due to the greater efficiency of the Boeing 737 Next Generation and rising costs for maintenance, fuel, and crew training, Alaska Airlines decided to phase out its remaining 26 MD-80s and trained its pilots to fly the newer Boeing 737-800s that were being ordered to replace them. According to the airline, the MD-80 burned 1,100 US gallons (4,200 L) of fuel per hour, while the 737-800 burns just 850 US gallons (3,200 L) per hour. The last MD-80 flights flew on August 25, 2008, with one flight from San Jose to Seattle and another from Sacramento to Seattle.[19] To mark its transition to an all-Boeing fleet, Alaska Airlines unveiled a 737-800 called Spirit of Seattle with Boeing's house colors painted on the fuselage and the airline's Eskimo logo painted on the tail fin.[36]

Also in 2005, Alaska Airlines contracted out many of its jobs, including ground crew positions, to Menzies Aviation. In some cases, this resulted in an almost 40% decline in wages.[37] This agreement was found to be a violation of union agreements in 2008 and the new ground crews caused enough damage to aircraft in the first year to make the savings negligible.[38][39] In addition, Menzies contractors gained a reputation of stealing from checked bags after a few incidents in 2007.[40]

 
An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-400 Combi aircraft at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport

Starting in June 2006, Alaska Airlines introduced new cargo aircraft to the fleet: five 737-400C combi aircraft and one 737-400F freighter. The aircraft were originally purchased by Alaska as passenger aircraft in 1992, and converted by Pemco Air Services.[41] The 737-400C "combi" aircraft were uniquely suited for the needs of Alaska, carrying a combination of four cargo pallets and 72 passengers, allowing goods and people to be transported to remote towns. 737-400 based aircraft had 20% more passenger and cargo capacity than the aging Boeing 737-200 cargo aircraft they replaced.

On September 9, 2007, Alaska Airlines introduced daily nonstop service between Portland, Oregon, to Boston.[42] On October 12, 2007, the airline began service to Hawaii with a flight to Honolulu from Seattle. Seattle–Kauai service began on October 28, 2007, and Anchorage–Honolulu service began on December 6, 2007.[43]

On October 26, 2008, Alaska launched service from Seattle to Minneapolis-Saint Paul.[44] On August 3, 2009, service from Seattle to Austin, Texas, began.[45] Service from Seattle to Houston began on September 23, 2009[46] and from Seattle to Atlanta on October 23, 2009.[47]

2010s Edit

 
An Alaska – Horizon Bombardier Q400, following the retirement of the Horizon Air brand

In March 2010, Alaska Airlines began service from San Jose, California, to Kahului and Kona, Hawaii, and also from Sacramento, California, to Kahului, Hawaii.[48]

On September 27, 2010, Alaska Airlines began service between Seattle and Lambert-St. Louis International Airport.[49][50]

2011 brought a major change for the Alaska Air Group; starting at the beginning of the year, Horizon Air would no longer operate as a separate regional airline.[51] Instead, it transitioned to a capacity purchase agreement (CPA) business model, which had by that time become the regional airline industry standard. Under the CPA, Horizon operates and maintains its aircraft, while Alaska Airlines is responsible for scheduling, marketing and pricing all flights.[51][52] As part of the change to the new business model, the Horizon Air brand was retired and all Horizon planes were repainted with a co-branded "Alaska Horizon" livery.[53][52]

Alaska Airlines also entered into a similar capacity purchase agreement with the nation's largest regional airline, SkyWest Airlines. Starting in May 2011, SkyWest started operating several routes for Alaska under the brand "Alaska SkyWest".[54]

In January 2011, Alaska Airlines placed an order for thirteen 737-900ERs. The aircraft have been delivered between 2012 and 2014[needs update] Alaska also ordered two 737-800s as part of this order.[55][56][57]

 
Alaska's previous livery on a 737-800

Alaska Airlines continues pioneering new technologies today. In 2011 Alaska Airlines partnered with Boeing and Fujitsu to be the first to use a new technology called Component Management Optimization, which will streamline maintenance checks. It will do this by allowing mechanics to point a handheld device at little RFID tags attached to certain parts of the aircraft, which will display information about when parts were last replaced. This will allow mechanics to perform inspections quicker than conventional methods. The program is scheduled to launch in 2012.[58] Also in mid-2011, the airline issued iPads to its pilots to replace 25 pounds of paper flight manuals that pilots are currently required to carry on flights (Electronic flight bag). Alaska Airlines is the first major airline to use iPads on flights; all pilots had iPads by the middle of June 2011. This was the first part of the airline's initiative to do away with the flight bag; the airline is also considering using iPads for displaying aeronautical charts.[59]

In November 2011 Alaska Airlines flew 75 commercial passenger flights in the U.S. powered by biofuel using a 20 percent blend of sustainable biofuel made from used cooking oil that meets rigorous international safety and sustainability standards.[60]

On February 16, 2012, Alaska Airlines' CEO, Bill Ayer, retired. Ayer became the airline's CEO in 2002 and has been credited for reducing costs and keeping the airline profitable without going through bankruptcy. The airline's president Brad Tilden officially became the new CEO on May 15, 2012.[61]

On March 9, 2012, Alaska Airlines began service from Seattle to Kansas City[62] and on June 11, 2012, began service to Philadelphia.[63] Seattle-Tacoma-Miami International Airport flights ended on July 15, 2012, but service to nearby Fort Lauderdale began on July 16.[64] New service to San Antonio began on September 17, 2012.[65] Alaska Airlines also began service from San Diego to Orlando on October 11, 2012.[66][67]

In October 2012 (2012-10), Alaska placed the largest order in its history when it ordered a total of 50 Boeing 737s in a deal worth US$5 billion at list prices. The order consists of 20 Boeing 737 MAX 8s, 17 Boeing 737 MAX 9s and 13 Boeing 737-900ERs.[68][69][70]

Alaska Airlines announced a plan in June 2013 to begin replacing Boeing 737s on flights between Fairbanks and Anchorage, Alaska, with Bombardier Q400s operated by Horizon Air and based out of Anchorage beginning in March 2014. The plan was intended to reduce operating expenses and eventually lower fares but was met with a great deal of skepticism by Fairbanks residents who expressed their frustration about the safety of the aircraft and outside boarding in the cold winter climate through social media. Alaska Airlines responded to the comments on Facebook attempting to reassure passengers of the safety of the Bombardier Q400s as well as promising to address the unusual aspects of flying in Alaska. The airline ended up modifying one of the jetways at Fairbanks International Airport so that passengers would not have to go outside to board.[71] In November 2017, Alaska announced that it would revert to all jet service in the state of Alaska and that it would close its Horizon Airbase in Anchorage in March 2018.[72]

 
Alaska unveiled its new logo and livery in 2016, as seen here on a Boeing 737-800

New nonstop service from Seattle to Salt Lake City began in 2013 and from Seattle to Albuquerque, Baltimore, Detroit, New Orleans, Tampa, and Cancun all began in 2014. Several other routes were later added from Salt Lake City in a competitive move against Delta Airlines when that carrier added many new routes from Seattle.

In 2015, Alaska Airlines announced 3 new nonstop destinations from Seattle, to Charleston, Nashville, and Raleigh-Durham. These, along with a flight between Los Angeles and Baltimore, began in late 2015 using their 737 aircraft.[73]

On January 25, 2016, for the first time in 25 years, Alaska Airlines unveiled a major update to its brand, which included a new logo and livery.[74][75][76] In the new design, the Alaska wordmark was streamlined and the design of the Eskimo logo was simplified and the ruffs on the parka were made more colorful.

In 2017, Alaska Airlines expanded to Indianapolis, with non-stop service to Seattle in May and San Francisco in September.[77] The San Francisco route was discontinued in September 2018.[78]

In September 2018, Alaska Airlines added non-stop service from Seattle to Pittsburgh.[79]

Virgin America acquisition Edit

 
Following its acquisition with Virgin America, Alaska painted several aircraft, including this Airbus A321 inherited from Virgin America, in a "More to Love" special livery to commemorate the merger

On April 4, 2016, Alaska Air Group announced it would acquire Virgin America, an airline based out of the San Francisco Bay Area. With Virgin America operating hubs in San Francisco and Los Angeles, the merger greatly expanded the presence of Alaska Airlines in California and the West Coast.[80]

After the acquisition was announced, Richard Branson, the head of the Virgin Group and one of the founders of Virgin America, described himself as "sad" and disappointed.[80] Despite the protest from its most high-profile shareholder, the majority of Virgin America's shareholders voted to approve the sale to Alaska Air Group.[81]

Alaska Air Group purchased Virgin America for $57 per share, a total valuation of $2.6 billion, with additional expenses bringing the cost to approximately $4 billion.[82] The acquisition was completed on December 14, 2016.[83]

The DOT issued a single operating certificate for the combined airlines on January 11, 2018. The airlines merged into the same passenger service system on April 25, 2018, meaning that most of the customer-facing portions of the company (including flight numbers, website, mobile apps, and airport check-in kiosks) have a single brand: Alaska Airlines.[84] Virgin America's final flight was on April 24, 2018.[85] The last Virgin America aircraft was repainted on June 2, 2019.[86]

The acquisition created one issue for the enlarged Group: Alaska operates an all-Boeing 737 fleet of aircraft, but Virgin America operated an all-Airbus fleet. Even though the 737 and A320 family jets are designed to operate in the same segment – short-to-medium-range segment of up to 200 passengers – the two jets are very different in terms of operation, and anyone wishing to change from a 737 to an Airbus A320 family jet (or vice versa) needs to go through a lengthy training course, a costly process for the airline.[87] The first Airbus leases expired in 2019, with more set to expire between 2021 and 2024.[88][89] In April 2020, in response to route suspensions stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic, Alaska grounded 19 inherited Virgin America aircraft, with 12 permanently retired and the other 7 unlikely to return to service; the airline is using pandemic-related flight reductions as an opportunity to retrain many Airbus pilots to fly the Boeing 737 instead.[90]

2020s Edit

Due to the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, Alaska Airlines announced that it will be reducing its number of employees by 30%. By the end of 2020, the firm cut out around 7,000 job positions out of its 23,000 total.[91]

In February 2020, Alaska Airlines announced its intention to join the Oneworld airline alliance.[92] On March 31, 2021, Alaska Airlines officially joined the Oneworld alliance, adding seven new airline partners, including Iberia, Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways, Royal Air Maroc, Royal Jordanian, S7 Airlines, and SriLankan Airlines.[93][94]

On December 22, 2020, Alaska Airlines agreed to buy 23 Boeing 737 MAX 9 jets.[95]

In November 2021, Alaska Airlines launched seasonal service to Belize, making it the fourth foreign country served by the airline.[96]

In August 2022, Alaska Airlines was reported to be an investor in Twelve, a sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) start up and chemical technology company based in Berkeley, California, that aims to make fuel out of carbon dioxide instead of things like organic vegetable oils, which would supposedly be cheaper than existing SAF production. Twelve’s E-Jet fuel would have 90% lower emissions than conventional fuel but not require changing existing aircraft. At proper scale, it would be cost competitive with existing fuel and be helpful in allowing Alaska Airlines to meet emissions goals.[97]

In October 2022, Alaska Airlines announced an agreement with Boeing to purchase 52 additional Boeing 737 MAX aircraft, the airline's largest aircraft order thus far.[98]

In May 2022, Alaska Airlines removed their inflight magazine, Alaska Beyond, and moved to an airline blog due to COVID-19 cleaning procedures. [99]

In January 2023, Alaska Airlines announced that it had officially dropped plastic cups from its inflight food and beverage services, becoming the first U.S. airline to do so. It said that the move is part of plans to replace its top five waste-producing items from onboard services by 2025.[100]

In April 2023, Alaska Airlines announced a partnership with Starlux Airlines. [101]

Destinations Edit

 
Alaska's operations at its primary hub, Seattle–Tacoma International Airport

Alaska's route system spans more than 115 destinations in the United States, Belize, Canada, Costa Rica, and Mexico. Some of the locations served in the carrier's namesake state include Anchorage, Adak, Barrow, Cordova, Fairbanks, Juneau, Ketchikan, Kodiak, Kotzebue, King Salmon, Nome, Prudhoe Bay, and Sitka, several of which are inaccessible by road. The airline began scheduled operations to the Russian Far East in 1991 following the breakup of the Soviet Union,[102][103] but suspended the service in 1998 following the 1998 Russian financial crisis.[25]

Alaska has historically been one of the largest carriers on the West Coast of the United States, with strong presences in Anchorage, Seattle, Portland, and San Diego, and serving four airports in the Bay Area and four airports in the Los Angeles metropolitan area.[104]

Some cities in Alaska's network with less traffic are served by regional airline partners under a capacity purchase agreement. Under that agreement, the regional airline is paid to operate and maintain aircraft used on flights that are scheduled and marketed by Alaska Airlines. Alaska's airline partners include wholly-owned regional subsidiary Horizon Air and carrier SkyWest Airlines.[citation needed]

Codeshare agreements Edit

Alaska Airlines is a member of the Oneworld alliance and has codeshares or mileage partnerships with the following airlines:[105][106]

Fleet Edit

 
Alaska painted a Boeing 737-900ER in a special "100 years strong" livery in 2016 to mark Boeing's 100th anniversary and celebrate its partnership with the airplane builder

Alaska Airlines operates a mainline passenger fleet consisting entirely of Boeing 737 series aircraft. Regional flights are operated with Embraer 175 jets by the Alaska-owned regional airline Horizon Air and contractor SkyWest Airlines. For cargo operations, Alaska maintains a small fleet of Boeing 737-based freighter jets that were formerly passenger aircraft.

Services Edit

Cabin Edit

First Class features priority boarding, complimentary food, as well as alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. Seating is wide recliner style seats in a 2-2 configuration on mainline aircraft and a 2-1 configuration on regional jets. Every seat in First Class offers power outlets.[citation needed]

Premium Class is located just behind First Class and features 35 inches (890 mm) of seat pitch,[108] four inches (100 mm) more than in Alaska's Main Cabin. Passengers receive priority boarding and complimentary alcoholic or non-alcoholic beverages. A small snack is included and food can be purchased.[109][110] Premium Class seating can be either purchased during booking or given through complimentary upgrades for elite fliers in Alaska's Mileage Plan loyalty program. On mainline aircraft, every seat in Premium Class offers USB and power outlets.

Main Cabin is Alaska's economy class offering. Main Cabin passengers receive a complimentary non-alcoholic beverage and a small snack. Food and alcoholic beverages are available for purchase. On mainline aircraft, every seat in Main Cabin offers USB and power outlets. {{

In-flight services Edit

Meals and beverages Edit

In 2006, the airline launched its buy on board meal program,[111] on most flights over 2 ½ hours.[112] As part of the program, the airline offers various "Picnic Packs" for a charge in Premium Class and Main Cabin.[113]

On February 1, 2012, Alaska Airlines started serving coffee from fellow Seattle company Starbucks on all of its flights. Previously Starbucks coffee was only offered on Horizon Air flights. Horizon Air had offered Starbucks coffee since February 1, 1990, and was the first airline in the world to serve Starbucks coffee onboard its flights.

Alaska also provides local offerings such as Beecher's Cheese, Tim's Cascade potato chips and Alaskan Amber beer.[114]

In 2015, Alaska updated inflight hot entrées with options created by Seattle Chef Tom Douglas.[115][116]

In July 2018, Alaska Airlines updated much of the First Class menu inspired by the airlines' West Coast presence. New items served included Oregon's Salt and Straw Caramel Ribbon Ice Cream, brownies from Los Angeles-based Sweet Lady Jane, and pasta from Cucina Fresca, based in Seattle. New features included ordering food before flights to allow for meals ready upon seating.[117]

In-flight internet access Edit

All Alaska Airlines jets are equipped with an in-flight Wi-Fi and streaming entertainment system. It had been announced that soon internet access service will move to a flat $8 charge per flight, but that change is only applies to the satellite WiFi based aircraft. On the older systems internet service is still fee-based for all passengers, depending on the length of the flight.[118][119] Streaming entertainment and electronic messaging services are free.

Alaska launched trials of In-flight Wi-Fi Internet service in 2009.[120][121] The airline tested both the Row44 satellite-based system, before picking the land-based Gogo Inflight Internet system on February 24, 2010.[122] In October 2010, flights between Anchorage and Fairbanks became the first to receive in-flight internet service.[123] In the following months, the system was expanded to cover all routes over the United States served by the airline with the exception of to and from Hawaii. Alaska Airlines began switching to a satellite-based system in the third quarter of 2019, which is available on all flights, including flights over the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. As of February 2020, 126 of 241 aircraft have satellite WiFi installed.

Reward programs Edit

Mileage Plan Edit

 

The frequent-flyer program of Alaska Airlines and subsidiary Horizon Air is called Mileage Plan. The program's airline partners include members of all three major airline alliances (Oneworld, SkyTeam, and Star Alliance), as well as several unaffiliated carriers. The Mileage Plan program has no membership fee and allows one-way redemption; accumulated miles expire after 2 years of inactivity.[124] The Plan has elite tiers (MVP, MVP Gold, MVP Gold 75K, and MVP Gold 100k) for frequent travelers,[125] who are provided with increased travel benefits.[126]

Club 49 Edit

On November 1, 2011, Alaska Airlines began a new program, called Club 49, exclusively for Mileage Plan members who are residents of Alaska. Benefits include free checked bags and email notifications about fare sales and discounts.[127] The program has no joining fee[128] and memberships are valid for a year after joining before they need to be renewed.[129]

Alaska Lounge Edit

The airline operates eight Alaska Lounges: Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, Alaska's largest hub, has three lounges, while Anchorage Airport, San Francisco International Airport, John F. Kennedy International Airport, Los Angeles International Airport, and Portland International Airport each have one.[130] In addition, Oneworld lounges are now also available for Alaska passengers.

Corporate affairs Edit

Alaska Air Cargo Edit

 
An Alaska Air Cargo Boeing 737-700F freighter takes off from Anchorage

Alaska Air Cargo has regional operations in parts of the United States and has the most extensive air cargo operations on the west coast of the U.S., larger than that of any other passenger airline. Alaska's cargo operations are focused primarily on the northwestern contiguous states and Alaska, between Anchorage and Seattle. South from Alaska, goods that are carried primarily include fresh Alaskan seafood, while products carried north from Seattle primarily include U.S. Postal Service mail; in addition, the airline also carries goods for remote Alaskan communities and personal packages.[131]

Philanthropy Edit

The Alaska Airlines Foundation, headquartered on the grounds of Ted Stevens International Airport in Anchorage, gives grants to 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations that are classified as charities in Alaska and Washington.[132]

Worker relations Edit

Alaska's pilot group is represented by the Air Line Pilots Association, International and its flight attendants are represented by the Association of Flight Attendants.[133]

Since May 2005 (2005-05), the airline's baggage-handling operations have been outsourced to Menzies Aviation. This was in response to the rejection of a contract between IAM (the union which represented the baggage handlers), and Alaska Airlines. It also allowed the airline to save an estimated $13 million a year.[134] In late 2016, Alaska Airlines created a wholly owned subsidiary McGee Air Services which would compete with Menzies Aviation for ground handling contracts in select Alaska cities.[135]

Accidents and incidents Edit

Alaska Airlines has had eleven major aviation accidents in its long history, nine of which resulted in deaths, with the other two resulting in the aircraft being written off but no deaths. A total of 226 passengers and crew along with two people on the ground have been killed.

  • On November 30, 1947, Flight 009, a Douglas C-54A (NC91009), with routing Anchorage–YakutatPort Hardy–Seattle, crash-landed while attempting to make an Instrument Landing System (ILS) approach at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport in Seattle. The plane went off the runway, rolled down an embankment, struck a ditch, and continued into the intersection of the Des Moines Highway and South 188th Street where it struck an automobile, caught fire and spilled fuel over the area. Of the 28 occupants, eight died, plus the driver of the car. The crash was attributed to pilot error.[136]
  • On January 20, 1949, Flight 8, a Douglas C-47A (NC91006), was on routing Homer, AlaskaKenai, Alaska, when the plane struck the side of Ptarmigan Head 9 miles (14 km) east of the center of the airway to Kenai. Of the six passengers on board, five died. The cause was determined to be the pilot straying off the designated airway.[137]
  • On August 8, 1954, an Alaska Airlines C-47A (N91008) operating the routing of McGrath, Alaska to Colorado Creek, Alaska, crashed into the side of a mountain about 25 miles (40 km) northwest of McGrath. Both pilots died.[138]
  • On March 2, 1957, Flight 100, a Douglas C-54B (N90449) on the routing of Seattle–Fairbanks–Seattle hit a mountain 3.8 miles (6.1 km) from Blyn while on approach to Seattle. All five occupants died. The cause of the crash was the pilot's decision to enter an area of low overcast in mountainous terrain, as well as a navigation error.[139]
  • On July 21, 1961, Flight 779, a Douglas DC-6A (N6118C) operating Seattle-–Shemya crashed short of the runway, killing the six crew. The cause of the crash was that the power to the runway and approach lighting systems had been cut off two days earlier, and the control tower neglected to inform the pilots this as they made their approach in the dark.[140]
  • On April 17, 1967, An Alaska Airlines Lockheed L-1049H Super Constellation (N7777C) with 28 passengers and four crew members aboard landed with the landing gear retracted during heavy snowfall at Kotzebue Airport. Everyone on board survived but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair.[141]
  • On September 4, 1971, Flight 1866, a Boeing 727-193 operating AnchorageCordovaYakutatJuneauSitka crashed into a mountain in the Chilkat Mountain Range about 18.5 miles (29.8 km) from the airport while on approach to Juneau. All seven crew members and 104 passengers were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be misleading navigational information given to the flight crew, the failure of the crew to use all navigational aids and not performing the required audio identification of the navigational facilities.[142]
  • On April 5, 1976, Flight 60, a Boeing 727-81 (N124AS) operating JuneauKetchikan overran the runway while landing in Ketchikan after the captain decided to attempt a go-around at the last moment. One passenger died in the accident. The cause of the crash was determined to be pilot error for initiating a go-around after commitment to landing and the pilot's "unprofessional decision" to abandon the precision approach.[143]
  • On June 9, 1987, an Alaska Airlines Boeing 727-90C (N766AS) at Anchorage International Airport with two people on board struck a jetway while taxiing and caught fire, destroying the aircraft. The avionics technician inadvertently deactivated the brake pressurization system.[144]
  • On March 13, 1990, an Alaska Airlines Boeing 727 taking off from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport struck and killed a man who ran onto the runway. There were no injuries on the 727. Airport authorities determined that the man was a patient at a nearby mental hospital.[145]
  • On January 31, 2000, Flight 261, a McDonnell Douglas MD-80, crashed into the Pacific Ocean near Anacapa Island, in the California Channel Islands, while preparing to attempt an emergency landing at LAX en route from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, to San Francisco and Seattle, killing all 88 people on board. In its report, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) determined the cause of the accident to be the failure of acme nut threads, which were part of the jackscrew assembly for the horizontal stabilizer's trim system. The failure happened because of insufficient lubrication of the jackscrew assembly, which was the result of Alaska's extended lubrication and inspection intervals and from the Federal Aviation Administration's approval of those intervals. NTSB also found that the lack of a fail-safe mechanism for the failure of the acme nut threads on the MD-80 design contributed to the accident. This incident, along with an earlier ValuJet Flight 592 crash, led to closer FAA oversight of airline maintenance operations.[146]
  • On November 14, 2020, Flight 66, a Boeing 737-700, hit and killed a brown bear while landing at the Yakutat Airport in Alaska.[147]
  • On August 20, 2023, Flight 1288, a Boeing 737-800 (N516AS), suffered a hard landing at John Wayne Airport causing the left main landing gear to puncture the left wing of the aircraft; remnants of Hurricane Hilary were moving through the area at the time.[148][149]

Employee incidents Edit

  • On September 2, 2019, an Alaska Airlines flight attendant called for an evacuation of Terminal A of the Newark Liberty International Airport, causing panic among Labor Day travelers.[150] [151] The flight attendant was subsequently detained by police who determined that the incident was a false alarm; the employee reportedly suffered from a mental health-related issue at the time.[152]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Partnership suspended on March 1, 2022, in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[107]

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External links Edit

  • Official website  
  • Alaska Airlines Current Fleet

alaska, airlines, this, article, about, airline, known, parent, company, alaska, group, major, american, airline, headquartered, seatac, washington, within, seattle, metropolitan, area, fifth, largest, airline, north, america, when, measured, scheduled, passen. This article is about the airline known as Alaska Airlines For its parent company see Alaska Air Group Alaska Airlines is a major American airline headquartered in SeaTac Washington within the Seattle metropolitan area It is the fifth largest airline in North America when measured by scheduled passengers carried Alaska together with its regional partners Horizon Air and SkyWest Airlines operates a route network primarily focused on connecting cities along the West Coast of the United States to over 100 destinations in the contiguous United States Belize Canada Costa Rica Guatemala and Mexico Alaska AirlinesIATA ICAO CallsignAS ASA ALASKAFoundedApril 14 1932 91 years ago 1932 04 14 as McGee Airways Commenced operationsJune 6 1944 79 years ago 1944 06 06 1 AOC ASAA802A 2 HubsAnchorageLos AngelesPortland OR San FranciscoSeattle TacomaFocus citiesBoise ID 3 San DiegoSan Jose CA Frequent flyer programMileage PlanAllianceOneworldFleet size305Destinations117Parent companyAlaska Air GroupHeadquartersSeaTac WashingtonKey peopleBen Minicucci CEO Brad Tilden Chairman FounderLinious Mac McGeeEmployees22 918 Oct 2022 4 Websitealaskaair wbr comThe airline operates out of five hubs with its primary hub being at Seattle Tacoma International Airport 5 Alaska Airlines is a member of Oneworld the third largest airline alliance in the world 6 As of 2020 the airline employs over 16 000 people and has been ranked by J D Power and Associates as having the highest customer satisfaction of the traditional airlines for twelve consecutive years 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1932 1945 1 2 Expansion after World War II 1945 1949 1 3 New leadership 1950s 1 4 Jet age 1960s 1 5 Economic hardship 1970s 1 6 Post deregulation expansion 1978 1990 1 7 New competition new technologies 1990s 1 8 Introducing flights across the U S 2000s 1 9 2010s 1 9 1 Virgin America acquisition 1 10 2020s 2 Destinations 2 1 Codeshare agreements 3 Fleet 4 Services 4 1 Cabin 4 2 In flight services 4 2 1 Meals and beverages 4 2 2 In flight internet access 5 Reward programs 5 1 Mileage Plan 5 2 Club 49 5 3 Alaska Lounge 6 Corporate affairs 6 1 Alaska Air Cargo 6 2 Philanthropy 6 3 Worker relations 7 Accidents and incidents 7 1 Employee incidents 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditEarly years 1932 1945 Edit See also McGee Airways and Star Air Service nbsp A Stinson S Junior aircraft of McGee Airways McGee Airways was the precursor to present day Alaska Airlines McGee Airways a precursor to Alaska Airlines was established by Linious Mac McGee and flew its first service between Anchorage and Bristol Bay 8 Service was unscheduled with flights taking off when passengers or a load of cargo or mail needed passage 9 The airline struggled financially during the Great Depression Too many airlines were in Anchorage at the time with not enough demand to support them The first of these mergers was in 1934 when McGee sold his namesake airline for US 50 000 equivalent to 1 093 781 in 2022 to Star Air Service an airline also located in Anchorage This allowed McGee to enter the mining industry 10 With a fleet of 15 aircraft Star Air Service was a dominant airline in Alaska but Star continued to struggle financially because of high maintenance costs for its wood and fabric planes 11 In 1937 McGee came back to the airline and opened a liquor store and the airline began flying liquor to remote Alaskan communities That year Star Air Service purchased Alaska Interior Airlines and was incorporated as Star Air Lines 9 Star was again sold later that year to a group of miners 10 In 1938 federal regulation began when Congress created the Civil Aeronautics Board CAB which awarded the airline most of the routes that it wanted in Alaska but the coveted route between Seattle and Anchorage was awarded to Pan American Airways 11 In 1941 Star Air Service was purchased by Raymond Marshall a businessman from New York City In 1942 the airline purchased three other airlines in Alaska Lavery Air Service Mirow Air Service and Pollack Flying Service as well as a hangar at the Anchorage airport That year the airline s name was changed to Alaska Star Airlines 11 The name Alaska Airlines was adopted on May 2 1944 having narrowly beaten a competitor who was also applying for the name 8 In the 1940s Alaska s headquarters were in Anchorage 12 When the United States entered World War II in December 1941 Alaska Airlines faced a shortage of pilots During the war the airline lacked funds and equipment and pilots were often forced to buy fuel for their planes out of their own pockets The company which was frequently subjected to lawsuits also went through many different presidents during this time In 1943 Alaska Airlines purchased the Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar its first multi engine aircraft That same year the company s stock was traded for the first time on the American Stock Exchange 10 11 Expansion after World War II 1945 1949 Edit nbsp An Alaska Airlines Douglas DC 3 one of the aircraft purchased by the airline after World War IIIn 1945 Alaska Airlines hired its first stewardesses 11 In 1947 jockey James Wooten became president of the airline and he began to expand the airline greatly 11 12 Under his leadership the company purchased many surplus military aircraft from the government that were used during World War II The airline purchased Douglas DC 3s Douglas DC 4s and Curtiss Wright C 46 Commandos 8 Alaska Airlines was the first carrier certified to operate DC 3s on skis 10 Alaska Airlines large charter business made it profitable and the airline moved its base of operations to Paine Field an airport north of Seattle It kept a branch office in Anchorage however Despite its success Alaska Airlines worldwide charter business was short lived In 1949 the CAB tightened its regulations and placed heavy fines on the airline and shut it down completely for safety violations The airline was prohibited from operating worldwide charter flights and president James Wooten left the company 10 11 Also in 1949 Alaska Air began operating five Bell 47B helicopters in order to support oil exploration on the North Slope thus becoming the first airline in Alaska to operate rotary wing aircraft 13 In 1949 the airline was a major participant in an effort by the newly established state of Israel to airlift Jews out of Yemen to Israel in what became known as Operation Magic Carpet C 46 or DC 4 aircraft were used for the nearly 3 000 mile flight made necessary to avoid overflying Arab nations Planes flew from Eritrea to Aden then along the Gulf of Aqaba to Tel Aviv After unloading the refugees crews then immediately continued to Cyprus afraid to stay on the ground in Tel Aviv for fear of being bombed Some 49 000 Yemenite Jews were airlifted by Alaska Airlines and other carriers without a single loss of life 14 New leadership 1950s Edit Alaska Airlines started the 1950s without its worldwide charter business and operations restricted to the state of Alaska In 1950 it purchased two smaller Alaskan airlines Collins Air Service and Al Jones Airways 11 Though the airline had grown much under the ownership of Raymond Marshall the CAB forced him out in 1951 due to continuing financial troubles Also Marshall had owned Alaska Airlines with the intent of getting money for himself and he was not concerned about the long term stability of the company 11 In 1951 the CAB awarded Alaska Airlines with a temporary certificate allowing them to operate on routes from the Alaskan cities of Anchorage and Fairbanks to Seattle and Portland in the contiguous United States this award would become permanent in 1957 9 10 In 1952 the CAB appointed Nelson David as president and he began to improve the financial stability of the airline By 1957 with the carrier in a better financial situation David left and Charles Willis Jr became the company s new president and CEO A pilot during World War II Willis introduced several marketing gimmicks that set the airline apart from other ones of the day Under his leadership Alaska Airlines became the first to show inflight movies The company began service with the Douglas DC 6 the airline s first pressurized plane enabling flights above clouds and weather disturbances On these DC 6s the airline introduced Golden Nugget service which included an on board saloon and piano 11 Jet age 1960s Edit nbsp The Convair 880 was Alaska Airlines first jet aircraft In 1961 competitors began introducing jets on routes Alaska Airlines flew To counter this competition Willis negotiated with aircraft manufacturer Convair to purchase a Convair 880 jetliner with no money down for use on routes between Alaska and the contiguous United States The company introduced the new jet aircraft the same year In 1966 the company received its first Boeing 727 100 jets and removed the Convair 880 from the fleet as a financing condition by Boeing concerning the purchase of the 727 jetliners Several of Alaska s first 727s were series 100C models which could be operated either as all cargo freighters in an all passenger configuration or as mixed passenger freight combi aircraft In the spring of 1967 greatly increased passenger loads required quick addition of fleet aircraft and Alaska purchased a Convair 990 jetliner formerly operated by Brazilian air carrier Varig as PP VJE which then became Alaska Airlines N987AS This aircraft remained in service along with an increased fleet of Boeing 727 100 s which were then joined by stretched Boeing 727 200s which in turn became Alaska Airlines signature aircraft for the next 25 years It also became the first carrier to fly the Lockheed L 100 Hercules L382 model the civil version of the military C 130 cargo turboprop which was used to transport oil drilling rigs to Alaska s North Slope and later to Ecuador 9 Alaska also owned Lockheed Constellation propliners including two Lockheed L 1649A Starliners from 1962 to 1968 and three L 1049 s which were used for Military Air Transport Service operations citation needed Smaller prop and turboprop aircraft were also operated including the Convair 240 de Havilland Canada DHC 6 Twin Otter and Super Catalina amphibian aircraft as well as two versions of the Grumman Goose amphibian aircraft one with piston engines and the other model being a conversion to turboprop engines which the airline called the Turbo Goose 15 The Catalina and Grumman amphibian seaplane aircraft joined the fleet when the airline acquired local southeast Alaska operator Alaska Coastal Airlines in 1968 nbsp A Boeing 727 100 at Seattle Tacoma International Airport The airline introduced this type in the mid 1960s During this time Alaska Air faced some tough competition from other airlines such as Northwest Airlines Pan Am and Pacific Northern Airlines an Alaska based air carrier operating Boeing 720 jetliners that was subsequently acquired by and merged into Western Airlines in 1967 Northwest and Pan Am at different times operated Boeing 747 wide body jetliners on their services to Alaska with Northwest flying Seattle Anchorage nonstop with the jumbo jet and Pan Am flying Seattle Fairbanks nonstop with the 747 To set itself apart from the competition Alaska Air turned to some cheap but imaginative gimmicks such as having safety instructions read as rhymes staging fashion shows in the aisles and having bingo games on board while en route 11 In December 1962 Air Guinee signed a contract with Alaska Airlines which had the latter company providing management expertise in addition to two Douglas DC 4s The deal would have had Alaska Airlines contracting with the airline over a seven year period but the contract ended after only six months leading to the United States Agency for International Development paying a US 700 000 debt owed by the Guinean airline to Alaska Airlines 16 In 1965 Alaska Airlines turned over some routes between small Alaskan communities and some smaller aircraft to Wien Air Alaska This allowed Alaska to focus on more heavily traveled routes and allowed them to sell off smaller aircraft 10 Throughout the 1960s Alaska Airlines worked to promote tourism to Alaska by offering charter flights to the continental United States In an attempt to increase the state s appeal Alaska Airlines conducted a promotional tour of Japan in 1963 In 1967 as the state of Alaska celebrated its centennial Alaska Airlines introduced a promotional Gay Nineties theme with stewardesses dressed in Edwardian outfits That year Alaska Airlines expanded to southeast Alaska with the introduction of service to Sitka This led to the purchase of two smaller airlines Alaska Coastal Airlines and Cordova Airlines in 1968 11 Economic hardship 1970s Edit nbsp A Boeing 727 200Adv on approach to Los Angeles International Airport showing the new livery and logo introduced in the early 1970sIn the beginning of the 1970s Alaska Airlines began Boeing 707 charter flights to Siberia in the Soviet Union 13 This was the result of three years of secret negotiations between Alaska Airlines and Soviet authorities in which the US Department of State reluctantly chose not to block the plan for fear of a potentially negative response from the Soviets The airline gained permission to fly more than two dozen flights in 1970 1971 and 1972 10 11 Alaska Airlines was also operating Boeing 707 Boeing 720 and Boeing 720B jetliners in scheduled passenger service between destinations in Alaska and Seattle during the early and mid 1970s The airline though was not in good financial shape at that time Like much of the airline industry Alaska Airlines was hit with rising fuel and operating costs and was on the verge of bankruptcy 8 Revenues were significantly reduced when work on the Trans Alaska Pipeline System was delayed The airline s cargo aircraft had played a key role in building the pipeline but now sat idle The airline took another blow on September 4 1971 when a Boeing 727 100 jetliner crashed on landing in Juneau killing 111 people and resulting in America s worst single plane crash at the time Because the airline was struggling financially the airline s board ousted president and CEO Charles Willis Former board member Ronald Cosgrave succeeded him The airline was US 22 million in debt when Cosgrave took over so Cosgrave began to make major cuts The airline s cargo business was dropped completely as were many flights and employees Cosgrave also sought to improve the airline s tarnished image of Elastic Airlines referring to its poor schedule keeping The logo was changed to an image of a smiling Inuit man which remains today Although the exact identity of the man is unknown some believe it to be the face of either Chester Seveck a reindeer herder in Kotzebue or Oliver Amouak an Inupiat man Both were Alaskan natives 17 As a result of these efforts the airline made a profit in 1973 and continued to be profitable thereafter 11 Post deregulation expansion 1978 1990 Edit Alaska Airlines was one of only three US carriers that supported the 1978 Airline Deregulation Act knowing that it would reap significant growth and other benefits from deregulation 9 After deregulation the company s real estate division was spun off into its own company with Cosgrave becoming its chairman Leadership of the airline was passed to Bruce Kennedy a close associate of Cosgrave Cosgrave made an alliance with Alaska Airlines to purchase competitor Wien Air Alaska but this ultimately failed and resulted in fines for Alaska Air and its leaders for improprieties during the attempted acquisition Wien Air was liquidated in 1984 and never merged into Alaska Airlines 11 At the time of deregulation Alaska Airlines served ten cities in Alaska and one in the contiguous US the city of Seattle and it had only ten planes in its fleet 9 Immediately after deregulation the airline began to expand adding the cities of Portland and San Francisco to its network Soon later the airline resumed services to the Alaskan cities Nome and Kotzebue and it also introduced service to Palm Springs California Burbank and Ontario were added in 1981 9 11 In 1979 Alaska also studied the possibility of acquiring and merging with Hughes Air West however this never came to fruition Other cities in the continental US that were added to the airline s route map by 1985 were Oakland and San Jose in California Spokane in Washington Boise in Idaho and Phoenix and Tucson in Arizona 9 Deregulation also brought challenges to the airline however The airline was faced with increased competition and inflation that put tremendous pressure on costs profits and salaries By 1979 competitors Northwest Airlines and Western Airlines were both flying wide body McDonnell Douglas DC 10 jets on the core Anchorage Seattle nonstop route with additional competition being provided by Wien Air Alaska which had begun flying nonstop jet service between Anchorage and Seattle 18 Northwest was operating nonstop DC 10 service on the Fairbanks Seattle route at this time as well 18 There were also tensions with unions particularly mechanics and flight attendants 8 In 1985 the company had a three month long strike with its machinists By June the same year it was able to end the strike by promising to reduce labor costs and maintain peace with unions In November 1985 the airline introduced a daily air freight service called Gold Streak with service to and from Alaska 11 nbsp Alaska Airlines was the launch customer for the MD 83 and operated many of these jets throughout the 1980s and 1990s In the 1980s Alaska Airlines began acquiring McDonnell Douglas MD 80s to replace its aging 727s Alaska was the launch customer for the MD 83 taking delivery of its first MD 80s in 1985 19 Also in 1985 the Alaska Air Group was formed as a holding company for Alaska Airlines In 1986 Alaska Air Group acquired regional airline Horizon Air which remained a separate brand from Alaska Airlines since then both airlines have been subsidiaries of Alaska Air Group In 1987 Alaska Airlines purchased Jet America Airlines 20 21 Alaska initially operated Jet America as a separate airline but this proved economically unviable and Jet America s operations were merged into Alaska s Alaska also discontinued all flights to the Midwest and the East coast formerly operated by Jet America 22 Additional MD 80s entered the fleet via the acquisition of Jet America Airlines in 1987 23 There was also a big seasonal imbalance in travel to Alaska which mainly took place in the summer In an effort to compensate for this the airline introduced service to Mexican resorts where most travel takes place in the winter In 1988 the airline began servicing the Mexican resort cities of Mazatlan and Puerto Vallarta By the end of the 1980s 70 percent of Alaska Airlines passengers flew south of Seattle and the airline served 30 cities in 6 states outside Alaska The airline had successfully used the state of Alaska as a springboard to expand into larger more profitable markets 11 New competition new technologies 1990s Edit nbsp An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 400 landing at Vancouver International AirportThe airline began the 1990s with plans to lease 24 Boeing 737 400s from International Lease Finance Corporation ILFC 11 The first aircraft was delivered in April 1992 24 In 1991 Alaska Airlines added several routes In the Russian Far East it added the cities of Magadan and Khabarovsk as well as service to Toronto its first Canadian city and the first city east of the Rocky Mountains However Toronto was later dropped in 1992 11 and the Russian destinations in 1998 25 As the airline marked its 19th consecutive year of profits in a turbulent industry and racked up many awards for customer service Bruce Kennedy retired in May 1991 and was succeeded by Raymond J Vecci 11 Alaska Airlines also faced increased competition from low cost carriers One carrier that competed with Alaska was MarkAir Since it began operating in 1984 competition had been reduced because it had worked out feeder agreements with Alaska Airlines However after Alaska Air declined to buy the airline in the fall of 1991 it intensified competition with Alaska Mark Air offered low cost service on the Anchorage Seattle route and other routes in Alaska where Alaska Airlines earned almost one third of its revenues This hurt Alaska Airlines for the first time in 20 years it posted a loss of US 121 million To save money the airline canceled two proposed maintenance facilities and deferred a large aircraft purchase worth US 2 billion It was able to increase utilization on its existing planes though The airline also cut labor costs but this ended up making relations with unions tense 11 The cost reductions produced quick results In 1993 their losses decreased to US 45 million and they made a US 40 million profit the next year Eight percent of these revenues were generated by record setting cargo operations 11 Alaska had more competition in 1993 when low cost airline Southwest Airlines entered the Pacific Northwest by purchasing Morris Air Nevertheless Alaska Airlines was able to keep its costs down but it maintained its high level of customer service The airline also promoted itself as the last great airline and with the motto For the same price you just get more yet analysts felt that Alaska Air needed deeper cost cuts 9 11 At the same time the company had many strikes by the flight attendants union 11 Alaska continued to take delivery of new MD 83s during the 1990s both to meet the demands of a growing route system and to replace its aging and fuel inefficient 727 fleet Their last 727 was retired in March 1994 26 The airline s MD 80 fleet peaked at 44 aircraft in 1996 27 Vecci was dismissed in 1995 and replaced with John Kelly the former Horizon Air CEO The airline soon expanded West Coast routes to take advantage of an open skies agreement between the US and Canada 11 Alaska Airlines also pioneered some new technologies through the 1990s It added a heads up guidance system in 1989 to operate better in foggy conditions becoming the first airline to use this technology In 1995 the airline became the first U S airline to sell tickets on the Internet By 2000 all the airline s planes carried automated external defibrillators for use in in flight emergencies The airline also installed self service kiosks called Instant Travel Machines that printed boarding passes allowing customers to bypass the traditional ticket counter An X ray device an addition to the unit allowing passengers to check their own baggage was being tested in 1999 at Anchorage 11 This concept known as Airport of the Future by the airline was first tested in Anchorage and was later brought to its Seattle hub and it drew attention from other airlines as well 10 The airline would also become the first airline in the world to integrate GPS and Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System EGPWS technology adding a real time three dimensional display of terrain The system was operational in all the carrier s Boeing 737 400s by April 1999 11 The late 1990s also saw the carrier recording much profitability The airline added new training and maintenance facilities 11 Also the airline began buying new 737s ordering three Boeing 737 700s and becoming the launch customer for the Boeing 737 900 when it placed an order for ten of the jets in November 1997 28 29 Introducing flights across the U S 2000s Edit nbsp An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 900 at Seattle Tacoma International Airport Alaska was the launch customer of the 737 900 aircraft With the delivery of Boeing 737 Next Generation aircraft starting in 1999 Alaska began launching more medium haul flights In 2000 Alaska started service between Anchorage and Chicago On May 15 2001 the airline took delivery of its first 737 900 30 In 2001 the airline was granted slot exemptions by the Department of Transportation to operate a nonstop flight from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport to Seattle but it was halted after only a week due to the September 11 attacks The airline resumed service to Reagan Airport on December 4 2001 to meet the demand 31 In January 2002 William Ayer was named CEO of Alaska Airlines Ayer had been serving as president under Kelly since 1997 having come to Alaska from Horizon two years earlier after spending 13 years with the smaller airline Ayer took over as chairman and CEO of the Alaska in 2002 upon Kelly s retirement He led the company through a transformation called Alaska 2010 that was intended to insulate the airline from the traditional boom bust cycle of the airline industry 10 In 2002 flights to Newark New Jersey were launched and in 2003 services to Orlando began 32 33 34 In 2003 service to Boston began 35 In 2003 Alaska Airlines won the Technology Leadership Award from the magazine Air Transport World for its pioneering of new technologies both in the airport and within the airplane itself 10 nbsp The Boeing 737 800 replaced the airline s MD 83s which were retired in August 2008 In 2005 due to the greater efficiency of the Boeing 737 Next Generation and rising costs for maintenance fuel and crew training Alaska Airlines decided to phase out its remaining 26 MD 80s and trained its pilots to fly the newer Boeing 737 800s that were being ordered to replace them According to the airline the MD 80 burned 1 100 US gallons 4 200 L of fuel per hour while the 737 800 burns just 850 US gallons 3 200 L per hour The last MD 80 flights flew on August 25 2008 with one flight from San Jose to Seattle and another from Sacramento to Seattle 19 To mark its transition to an all Boeing fleet Alaska Airlines unveiled a 737 800 called Spirit of Seattle with Boeing s house colors painted on the fuselage and the airline s Eskimo logo painted on the tail fin 36 Also in 2005 Alaska Airlines contracted out many of its jobs including ground crew positions to Menzies Aviation In some cases this resulted in an almost 40 decline in wages 37 This agreement was found to be a violation of union agreements in 2008 and the new ground crews caused enough damage to aircraft in the first year to make the savings negligible 38 39 In addition Menzies contractors gained a reputation of stealing from checked bags after a few incidents in 2007 40 nbsp An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 400 Combi aircraft at Ted Stevens Anchorage International AirportStarting in June 2006 Alaska Airlines introduced new cargo aircraft to the fleet five 737 400C combi aircraft and one 737 400F freighter The aircraft were originally purchased by Alaska as passenger aircraft in 1992 and converted by Pemco Air Services 41 The 737 400C combi aircraft were uniquely suited for the needs of Alaska carrying a combination of four cargo pallets and 72 passengers allowing goods and people to be transported to remote towns 737 400 based aircraft had 20 more passenger and cargo capacity than the aging Boeing 737 200 cargo aircraft they replaced On September 9 2007 Alaska Airlines introduced daily nonstop service between Portland Oregon to Boston 42 On October 12 2007 the airline began service to Hawaii with a flight to Honolulu from Seattle Seattle Kauai service began on October 28 2007 and Anchorage Honolulu service began on December 6 2007 43 On October 26 2008 Alaska launched service from Seattle to Minneapolis Saint Paul 44 On August 3 2009 service from Seattle to Austin Texas began 45 Service from Seattle to Houston began on September 23 2009 46 and from Seattle to Atlanta on October 23 2009 47 2010s Edit nbsp An Alaska Horizon Bombardier Q400 following the retirement of the Horizon Air brandIn March 2010 Alaska Airlines began service from San Jose California to Kahului and Kona Hawaii and also from Sacramento California to Kahului Hawaii 48 On September 27 2010 Alaska Airlines began service between Seattle and Lambert St Louis International Airport 49 50 2011 brought a major change for the Alaska Air Group starting at the beginning of the year Horizon Air would no longer operate as a separate regional airline 51 Instead it transitioned to a capacity purchase agreement CPA business model which had by that time become the regional airline industry standard Under the CPA Horizon operates and maintains its aircraft while Alaska Airlines is responsible for scheduling marketing and pricing all flights 51 52 As part of the change to the new business model the Horizon Air brand was retired and all Horizon planes were repainted with a co branded Alaska Horizon livery 53 52 Alaska Airlines also entered into a similar capacity purchase agreement with the nation s largest regional airline SkyWest Airlines Starting in May 2011 SkyWest started operating several routes for Alaska under the brand Alaska SkyWest 54 In January 2011 Alaska Airlines placed an order for thirteen 737 900ERs The aircraft have been delivered between 2012 and 2014 needs update Alaska also ordered two 737 800s as part of this order 55 56 57 nbsp Alaska s previous livery on a 737 800Alaska Airlines continues pioneering new technologies today In 2011 Alaska Airlines partnered with Boeing and Fujitsu to be the first to use a new technology called Component Management Optimization which will streamline maintenance checks It will do this by allowing mechanics to point a handheld device at little RFID tags attached to certain parts of the aircraft which will display information about when parts were last replaced This will allow mechanics to perform inspections quicker than conventional methods The program is scheduled to launch in 2012 58 Also in mid 2011 the airline issued iPads to its pilots to replace 25 pounds of paper flight manuals that pilots are currently required to carry on flights Electronic flight bag Alaska Airlines is the first major airline to use iPads on flights all pilots had iPads by the middle of June 2011 This was the first part of the airline s initiative to do away with the flight bag the airline is also considering using iPads for displaying aeronautical charts 59 In November 2011 Alaska Airlines flew 75 commercial passenger flights in the U S powered by biofuel using a 20 percent blend of sustainable biofuel made from used cooking oil that meets rigorous international safety and sustainability standards 60 On February 16 2012 Alaska Airlines CEO Bill Ayer retired Ayer became the airline s CEO in 2002 and has been credited for reducing costs and keeping the airline profitable without going through bankruptcy The airline s president Brad Tilden officially became the new CEO on May 15 2012 61 On March 9 2012 Alaska Airlines began service from Seattle to Kansas City 62 and on June 11 2012 began service to Philadelphia 63 Seattle Tacoma Miami International Airport flights ended on July 15 2012 but service to nearby Fort Lauderdale began on July 16 64 New service to San Antonio began on September 17 2012 65 Alaska Airlines also began service from San Diego to Orlando on October 11 2012 66 67 In October 2012 2012 10 Alaska placed the largest order in its history when it ordered a total of 50 Boeing 737s in a deal worth US 5 billion at list prices The order consists of 20 Boeing 737 MAX 8s 17 Boeing 737 MAX 9s and 13 Boeing 737 900ERs 68 69 70 Alaska Airlines announced a plan in June 2013 to begin replacing Boeing 737s on flights between Fairbanks and Anchorage Alaska with Bombardier Q400s operated by Horizon Air and based out of Anchorage beginning in March 2014 The plan was intended to reduce operating expenses and eventually lower fares but was met with a great deal of skepticism by Fairbanks residents who expressed their frustration about the safety of the aircraft and outside boarding in the cold winter climate through social media Alaska Airlines responded to the comments on Facebook attempting to reassure passengers of the safety of the Bombardier Q400s as well as promising to address the unusual aspects of flying in Alaska The airline ended up modifying one of the jetways at Fairbanks International Airport so that passengers would not have to go outside to board 71 In November 2017 Alaska announced that it would revert to all jet service in the state of Alaska and that it would close its Horizon Airbase in Anchorage in March 2018 72 nbsp Alaska unveiled its new logo and livery in 2016 as seen here on a Boeing 737 800New nonstop service from Seattle to Salt Lake City began in 2013 and from Seattle to Albuquerque Baltimore Detroit New Orleans Tampa and Cancun all began in 2014 Several other routes were later added from Salt Lake City in a competitive move against Delta Airlines when that carrier added many new routes from Seattle In 2015 Alaska Airlines announced 3 new nonstop destinations from Seattle to Charleston Nashville and Raleigh Durham These along with a flight between Los Angeles and Baltimore began in late 2015 using their 737 aircraft 73 On January 25 2016 for the first time in 25 years Alaska Airlines unveiled a major update to its brand which included a new logo and livery 74 75 76 In the new design the Alaska wordmark was streamlined and the design of the Eskimo logo was simplified and the ruffs on the parka were made more colorful In 2017 Alaska Airlines expanded to Indianapolis with non stop service to Seattle in May and San Francisco in September 77 The San Francisco route was discontinued in September 2018 78 In September 2018 Alaska Airlines added non stop service from Seattle to Pittsburgh 79 Virgin America acquisition Edit nbsp Following its acquisition with Virgin America Alaska painted several aircraft including this Airbus A321 inherited from Virgin America in a More to Love special livery to commemorate the mergerOn April 4 2016 Alaska Air Group announced it would acquire Virgin America an airline based out of the San Francisco Bay Area With Virgin America operating hubs in San Francisco and Los Angeles the merger greatly expanded the presence of Alaska Airlines in California and the West Coast 80 After the acquisition was announced Richard Branson the head of the Virgin Group and one of the founders of Virgin America described himself as sad and disappointed 80 Despite the protest from its most high profile shareholder the majority of Virgin America s shareholders voted to approve the sale to Alaska Air Group 81 Alaska Air Group purchased Virgin America for 57 per share a total valuation of 2 6 billion with additional expenses bringing the cost to approximately 4 billion 82 The acquisition was completed on December 14 2016 83 The DOT issued a single operating certificate for the combined airlines on January 11 2018 The airlines merged into the same passenger service system on April 25 2018 meaning that most of the customer facing portions of the company including flight numbers website mobile apps and airport check in kiosks have a single brand Alaska Airlines 84 Virgin America s final flight was on April 24 2018 85 The last Virgin America aircraft was repainted on June 2 2019 86 The acquisition created one issue for the enlarged Group Alaska operates an all Boeing 737 fleet of aircraft but Virgin America operated an all Airbus fleet Even though the 737 and A320 family jets are designed to operate in the same segment short to medium range segment of up to 200 passengers the two jets are very different in terms of operation and anyone wishing to change from a 737 to an Airbus A320 family jet or vice versa needs to go through a lengthy training course a costly process for the airline 87 The first Airbus leases expired in 2019 with more set to expire between 2021 and 2024 88 89 In April 2020 in response to route suspensions stemming from the COVID 19 pandemic Alaska grounded 19 inherited Virgin America aircraft with 12 permanently retired and the other 7 unlikely to return to service the airline is using pandemic related flight reductions as an opportunity to retrain many Airbus pilots to fly the Boeing 737 instead 90 2020s Edit Due to the economic effects of the COVID 19 pandemic Alaska Airlines announced that it will be reducing its number of employees by 30 By the end of 2020 the firm cut out around 7 000 job positions out of its 23 000 total 91 In February 2020 Alaska Airlines announced its intention to join the Oneworld airline alliance 92 On March 31 2021 Alaska Airlines officially joined the Oneworld alliance adding seven new airline partners including Iberia Malaysia Airlines Qatar Airways Royal Air Maroc Royal Jordanian S7 Airlines and SriLankan Airlines 93 94 On December 22 2020 Alaska Airlines agreed to buy 23 Boeing 737 MAX 9 jets 95 In November 2021 Alaska Airlines launched seasonal service to Belize making it the fourth foreign country served by the airline 96 In August 2022 Alaska Airlines was reported to be an investor in Twelve a sustainable aviation fuel SAF start up and chemical technology company based in Berkeley California that aims to make fuel out of carbon dioxide instead of things like organic vegetable oils which would supposedly be cheaper than existing SAF production Twelve s E Jet fuel would have 90 lower emissions than conventional fuel but not require changing existing aircraft At proper scale it would be cost competitive with existing fuel and be helpful in allowing Alaska Airlines to meet emissions goals 97 In October 2022 Alaska Airlines announced an agreement with Boeing to purchase 52 additional Boeing 737 MAX aircraft the airline s largest aircraft order thus far 98 In May 2022 Alaska Airlines removed their inflight magazine Alaska Beyond and moved to an airline blog due to COVID 19 cleaning procedures 99 In January 2023 Alaska Airlines announced that it had officially dropped plastic cups from its inflight food and beverage services becoming the first U S airline to do so It said that the move is part of plans to replace its top five waste producing items from onboard services by 2025 100 In April 2023 Alaska Airlines announced a partnership with Starlux Airlines 101 Destinations EditMain article List of Alaska Airlines destinations nbsp Alaska s operations at its primary hub Seattle Tacoma International AirportAlaska s route system spans more than 115 destinations in the United States Belize Canada Costa Rica and Mexico Some of the locations served in the carrier s namesake state include Anchorage Adak Barrow Cordova Fairbanks Juneau Ketchikan Kodiak Kotzebue King Salmon Nome Prudhoe Bay and Sitka several of which are inaccessible by road The airline began scheduled operations to the Russian Far East in 1991 following the breakup of the Soviet Union 102 103 but suspended the service in 1998 following the 1998 Russian financial crisis 25 Alaska has historically been one of the largest carriers on the West Coast of the United States with strong presences in Anchorage Seattle Portland and San Diego and serving four airports in the Bay Area and four airports in the Los Angeles metropolitan area 104 Some cities in Alaska s network with less traffic are served by regional airline partners under a capacity purchase agreement Under that agreement the regional airline is paid to operate and maintain aircraft used on flights that are scheduled and marketed by Alaska Airlines Alaska s airline partners include wholly owned regional subsidiary Horizon Air and carrier SkyWest Airlines citation needed Codeshare agreements Edit Main article Mileage Plan Partner Airlines Alaska Airlines is a member of the Oneworld alliance and has codeshares or mileage partnerships with the following airlines 105 106 Aer Lingus Air Tahiti Nui American Airlines British Airways Cathay Pacific Condor El Al Fiji Airways Finnair Hainan Airlines Iberia Icelandair Japan Airlines Kenmore Air Korean Air LATAM Chile Malaysia Airlines Mokulele Airlines Qantas Qatar Airways Ravn Alaska Royal Air Maroc Royal Jordanian S7 Airlines a Singapore Airlines Southern Airways Express SriLankan Airlines Starlux AirlinesFleet Edit nbsp Alaska painted a Boeing 737 900ER in a special 100 years strong livery in 2016 to mark Boeing s 100th anniversary and celebrate its partnership with the airplane builderMain article Alaska Airlines fleet Alaska Airlines operates a mainline passenger fleet consisting entirely of Boeing 737 series aircraft Regional flights are operated with Embraer 175 jets by the Alaska owned regional airline Horizon Air and contractor SkyWest Airlines For cargo operations Alaska maintains a small fleet of Boeing 737 based freighter jets that were formerly passenger aircraft Services EditCabin Edit First Class features priority boarding complimentary food as well as alcoholic and non alcoholic beverages Seating is wide recliner style seats in a 2 2 configuration on mainline aircraft and a 2 1 configuration on regional jets Every seat in First Class offers power outlets citation needed Premium Class is located just behind First Class and features 35 inches 890 mm of seat pitch 108 four inches 100 mm more than in Alaska s Main Cabin Passengers receive priority boarding and complimentary alcoholic or non alcoholic beverages A small snack is included and food can be purchased 109 110 Premium Class seating can be either purchased during booking or given through complimentary upgrades for elite fliers in Alaska s Mileage Plan loyalty program On mainline aircraft every seat in Premium Class offers USB and power outlets Main Cabin is Alaska s economy class offering Main Cabin passengers receive a complimentary non alcoholic beverage and a small snack Food and alcoholic beverages are available for purchase On mainline aircraft every seat in Main Cabin offers USB and power outlets In flight services Edit Meals and beverages Edit In 2006 the airline launched its buy on board meal program 111 on most flights over 2 hours 112 As part of the program the airline offers various Picnic Packs for a charge in Premium Class and Main Cabin 113 On February 1 2012 Alaska Airlines started serving coffee from fellow Seattle company Starbucks on all of its flights Previously Starbucks coffee was only offered on Horizon Air flights Horizon Air had offered Starbucks coffee since February 1 1990 and was the first airline in the world to serve Starbucks coffee onboard its flights Alaska also provides local offerings such as Beecher s Cheese Tim s Cascade potato chips and Alaskan Amber beer 114 In 2015 Alaska updated inflight hot entrees with options created by Seattle Chef Tom Douglas 115 116 In July 2018 Alaska Airlines updated much of the First Class menu inspired by the airlines West Coast presence New items served included Oregon s Salt and Straw Caramel Ribbon Ice Cream brownies from Los Angeles based Sweet Lady Jane and pasta from Cucina Fresca based in Seattle New features included ordering food before flights to allow for meals ready upon seating 117 In flight internet access Edit All Alaska Airlines jets are equipped with an in flight Wi Fi and streaming entertainment system It had been announced that soon internet access service will move to a flat 8 charge per flight but that change is only applies to the satellite WiFi based aircraft On the older systems internet service is still fee based for all passengers depending on the length of the flight 118 119 Streaming entertainment and electronic messaging services are free Alaska launched trials of In flight Wi Fi Internet service in 2009 120 121 The airline tested both the Row44 satellite based system before picking the land based Gogo Inflight Internet system on February 24 2010 122 In October 2010 flights between Anchorage and Fairbanks became the first to receive in flight internet service 123 In the following months the system was expanded to cover all routes over the United States served by the airline with the exception of to and from Hawaii Alaska Airlines began switching to a satellite based system in the third quarter of 2019 which is available on all flights including flights over the Atlantic and Pacific oceans As of February 2020 126 of 241 aircraft have satellite WiFi installed Reward programs EditMileage Plan Edit Main article Mileage Plan nbsp The frequent flyer program of Alaska Airlines and subsidiary Horizon Air is called Mileage Plan The program s airline partners include members of all three major airline alliances Oneworld SkyTeam and Star Alliance as well as several unaffiliated carriers The Mileage Plan program has no membership fee and allows one way redemption accumulated miles expire after 2 years of inactivity 124 The Plan has elite tiers MVP MVP Gold MVP Gold 75K and MVP Gold 100k for frequent travelers 125 who are provided with increased travel benefits 126 Club 49 Edit On November 1 2011 Alaska Airlines began a new program called Club 49 exclusively for Mileage Plan members who are residents of Alaska Benefits include free checked bags and email notifications about fare sales and discounts 127 The program has no joining fee 128 and memberships are valid for a year after joining before they need to be renewed 129 Alaska Lounge Edit The airline operates eight Alaska Lounges Seattle Tacoma International Airport Alaska s largest hub has three lounges while Anchorage Airport San Francisco International Airport John F Kennedy International Airport Los Angeles International Airport and Portland International Airport each have one 130 In addition Oneworld lounges are now also available for Alaska passengers Corporate affairs EditAlaska Air Cargo Edit nbsp An Alaska Air Cargo Boeing 737 700F freighter takes off from AnchorageAlaska Air Cargo has regional operations in parts of the United States and has the most extensive air cargo operations on the west coast of the U S larger than that of any other passenger airline Alaska s cargo operations are focused primarily on the northwestern contiguous states and Alaska between Anchorage and Seattle South from Alaska goods that are carried primarily include fresh Alaskan seafood while products carried north from Seattle primarily include U S Postal Service mail in addition the airline also carries goods for remote Alaskan communities and personal packages 131 Philanthropy Edit The Alaska Airlines Foundation headquartered on the grounds of Ted Stevens International Airport in Anchorage gives grants to 501 c 3 non profit organizations that are classified as charities in Alaska and Washington 132 Worker relations Edit Alaska s pilot group is represented by the Air Line Pilots Association International and its flight attendants are represented by the Association of Flight Attendants 133 Since May 2005 2005 05 the airline s baggage handling operations have been outsourced to Menzies Aviation This was in response to the rejection of a contract between IAM the union which represented the baggage handlers and Alaska Airlines It also allowed the airline to save an estimated 13 million a year 134 In late 2016 Alaska Airlines created a wholly owned subsidiary McGee Air Services which would compete with Menzies Aviation for ground handling contracts in select Alaska cities 135 Accidents and incidents EditAlaska Airlines has had eleven major aviation accidents in its long history nine of which resulted in deaths with the other two resulting in the aircraft being written off but no deaths A total of 226 passengers and crew along with two people on the ground have been killed On November 30 1947 Flight 009 a Douglas C 54A NC91009 with routing Anchorage Yakutat Port Hardy Seattle crash landed while attempting to make an Instrument Landing System ILS approach at Seattle Tacoma International Airport in Seattle The plane went off the runway rolled down an embankment struck a ditch and continued into the intersection of the Des Moines Highway and South 188th Street where it struck an automobile caught fire and spilled fuel over the area Of the 28 occupants eight died plus the driver of the car The crash was attributed to pilot error 136 On January 20 1949 Flight 8 a Douglas C 47A NC91006 was on routing Homer Alaska Kenai Alaska when the plane struck the side of Ptarmigan Head 9 miles 14 km east of the center of the airway to Kenai Of the six passengers on board five died The cause was determined to be the pilot straying off the designated airway 137 On August 8 1954 an Alaska Airlines C 47A N91008 operating the routing of McGrath Alaska to Colorado Creek Alaska crashed into the side of a mountain about 25 miles 40 km northwest of McGrath Both pilots died 138 On March 2 1957 Flight 100 a Douglas C 54B N90449 on the routing of Seattle Fairbanks Seattle hit a mountain 3 8 miles 6 1 km from Blyn while on approach to Seattle All five occupants died The cause of the crash was the pilot s decision to enter an area of low overcast in mountainous terrain as well as a navigation error 139 On July 21 1961 Flight 779 a Douglas DC 6A N6118C operating Seattle Shemya crashed short of the runway killing the six crew The cause of the crash was that the power to the runway and approach lighting systems had been cut off two days earlier and the control tower neglected to inform the pilots this as they made their approach in the dark 140 On April 17 1967 An Alaska Airlines Lockheed L 1049H Super Constellation N7777C with 28 passengers and four crew members aboard landed with the landing gear retracted during heavy snowfall at Kotzebue Airport Everyone on board survived but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair 141 On September 4 1971 Flight 1866 a Boeing 727 193 operating Anchorage Cordova Yakutat Juneau Sitka crashed into a mountain in the Chilkat Mountain Range about 18 5 miles 29 8 km from the airport while on approach to Juneau All seven crew members and 104 passengers were killed The cause of the crash was determined to be misleading navigational information given to the flight crew the failure of the crew to use all navigational aids and not performing the required audio identification of the navigational facilities 142 On April 5 1976 Flight 60 a Boeing 727 81 N124AS operating Juneau Ketchikan overran the runway while landing in Ketchikan after the captain decided to attempt a go around at the last moment One passenger died in the accident The cause of the crash was determined to be pilot error for initiating a go around after commitment to landing and the pilot s unprofessional decision to abandon the precision approach 143 On June 9 1987 an Alaska Airlines Boeing 727 90C N766AS at Anchorage International Airport with two people on board struck a jetway while taxiing and caught fire destroying the aircraft The avionics technician inadvertently deactivated the brake pressurization system 144 On March 13 1990 an Alaska Airlines Boeing 727 taking off from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport struck and killed a man who ran onto the runway There were no injuries on the 727 Airport authorities determined that the man was a patient at a nearby mental hospital 145 On January 31 2000 Flight 261 a McDonnell Douglas MD 80 crashed into the Pacific Ocean near Anacapa Island in the California Channel Islands while preparing to attempt an emergency landing at LAX en route from Puerto Vallarta Mexico to San Francisco and Seattle killing all 88 people on board In its report the National Transportation Safety Board NTSB determined the cause of the accident to be the failure of acme nut threads which were part of the jackscrew assembly for the horizontal stabilizer s trim system The failure happened because of insufficient lubrication of the jackscrew assembly which was the result of Alaska s extended lubrication and inspection intervals and from the Federal Aviation Administration s approval of those intervals NTSB also found that the lack of a fail safe mechanism for the failure of the acme nut threads on the MD 80 design contributed to the accident This incident along with an earlier ValuJet Flight 592 crash led to closer FAA oversight of airline maintenance operations 146 On November 14 2020 Flight 66 a Boeing 737 700 hit and killed a brown bear while landing at the Yakutat Airport in Alaska 147 On August 20 2023 Flight 1288 a Boeing 737 800 N516AS suffered a hard landing at John Wayne Airport causing the left main landing gear to puncture the left wing of the aircraft remnants of Hurricane Hilary were moving through the area at the time 148 149 Employee incidents Edit On September 2 2019 an Alaska Airlines flight attendant called for an evacuation of Terminal A of the Newark Liberty International Airport causing panic among Labor Day travelers 150 151 The flight attendant was subsequently detained by police who determined that the incident was a false alarm the employee reportedly suffered from a mental health related issue at the time 152 See also EditList of airlines of Alaska Air transportation in the United StatesNotes Edit Partnership suspended on March 1 2022 in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 107 References Edit Norwood Tom Wegg John 2002 North American Airlines Handbook 3rd ed Sandpoint Idaho Airways International ISBN 0 9653993 8 9 Archived from the original on November 28 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big names launch Alaska Beyond Sinclair Broadcast Group Archived from the original on July 17 2015 Retrieved July 16 2015 Inflight Food and Seating Experience Alaska Airlines Archived from the original on May 1 2020 Retrieved August 31 2021 Rhubarb asparagus and Salt amp Straw ice cream on a plane If you re in First Class it s on the summer menu Alaska Airlines In flight Wi Fi Alaskaair com Archived from the original on August 27 2011 Retrieved August 22 2011 Alaska Airlines In flight Wi Fi Available On Most Every Aircraft Alaska Airlines June 2 2011 Archived from the original on June 27 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 Malik Om February 27 2009 Alaska Airlines to Offer In flight Internet Access gigaom com Archived from the original on October 4 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 Alaska Airlines Trials Satellite Based Inflight Wireless Internet Service Alaska Airlines February 26 2009 Archived from the original on July 22 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 Alaska Airlines to Offer Gogo Inflight Internet Gogoinflight com February 24 2010 Retrieved September 17 2010 Travel Alaska Airlines offers Internet service in Alaska The Seattle Times October 22 2010 Archived from the original on October 25 2010 Retrieved October 22 2010 Other Mileage Plan Information Alaska Air Group Archived from the original on June 10 2015 Retrieved September 14 2009 Earning Mileage Plan elite status Alaska Air Group Retrieved February 18 2022 MVP amp MVP Gold Qualification Levels and Benefits Alaska Air Group Archived from the original on May 2 2011 Retrieved September 14 2009 Alaska Airlines Debuts New Club 49 Benefits Program Exclusively for Alaska State Residents Alaska Airlines October 18 2011 Archived from the original on October 22 2011 Retrieved December 17 2011 Introducing Club 49 Alaska Airlines Archived from the original on June 21 2012 Retrieved September 18 2012 Club 49 Q amp A Alaska Airlines Archived from the original on June 7 2012 Retrieved August 16 2012 Alaska Lounge airport lounge locations and hours Alaska Airlines Archived from the original on July 21 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Alaska Air Cargo Alaska Airlines June 2011 Archived from the original on July 23 2012 Retrieved July 28 2012 Alaska Airlines Foundation Alaska Airlines Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Retrieved July 28 2012 Employees and Collective Bargaining Alaska Airlines Archived from the original on July 23 2012 Retrieved July 28 2012 Allison Melissa May 14 2005 Alaska Airlines outsources 472 baggage handling jobs The Seattle Times Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Retrieved July 28 2012 Alaska Airlines Announces the Formation of a New Subsidiary McGee Air Services Newsroom Alaska Airlines March 29 2016 Archived from the original on July 25 2020 Retrieved April 12 2018 Accident description for NC91009 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for NC91006 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N91008 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N90449 at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N6118C at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N7777C at the Aviation Safety Network Accident description for N2969G at the Aviation Safety Network Technical report PDF December 22 1976 Archived PDF from the original on February 18 2012 Retrieved September 29 2012 Accident description for N766AS at the Aviation Safety Network Newsroom Accident history Alaska Airlines Archived from the original on October 17 2020 Retrieved October 16 2020 Alaska Airlines Flight 261 National Transportation Safety Board NTSB Archived from the original on April 27 2004 Retrieved June 13 2012 Alaska Airlines flight hits bear on runway during landing CNN November 16 2020 Archived from the original on November 17 2020 Retrieved November 17 2020 Alaska 737 landing gear punctures wing at Santa Ana Airport One Mile at a Time August 20 2023 Alaska Airlines jet damaged upon landing in Santa Ana during storm FlightGlobal August 21 2023 Vigdor Neil Sandoval Edgar September 3 2019 Chaos Erupts at Newark Airport as Travelers Are Evacuated From Terminal The New York Times Flight Attendant Who Sparked Newark Airport Panic Detained Airline Apologizes NBC New York Sources Monday Night s Incident At Newark Airport Touched Off By Bipolar Airline Employee CBS New York External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alaska Airlines Official website nbsp Alaska Airlines Current FleetPortals nbsp United States nbsp Alaska nbsp Companies nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alaska Airlines amp oldid 1180623770, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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