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Mesaba Airlines

Mesaba Aviation, Inc. (operating as Mesaba Airlines) was a regional airline in the United States that operated from 1944 until 2012, when it merged with Pinnacle Airlines to form Endeavor Air. It was based in Eagan, Minnesota[3] From 2010 to 2012 the airline was a wholly owned subsidiary of Pinnacle Airlines Corp. with code sharing flights operated as Delta Connection for Delta Air Lines and US Airways Express for US Airways. Previously, the airline operated code sharing service as Northwest Airlink and Northwest Jetlink on behalf of Northwest Airlines which subsequently merged with Delta. Mesaba also previously operated connecting flight services in association with Republic Airlines before this air carrier was subsequently merged into Northwest. Mesaba Airlines effectively ceased operations on January 4, 2012, when all aircraft and personnel were transitioned to the Pinnacle Airlines operating certificate. Mesaba's operating certificate was surrendered on July 31, 2012.

Mesaba Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
XJ MES MESABA
Founded1944 (1944)
(as Mesaba Aviation)[1]
Commenced operationsFebruary 4, 1974 (1974-02-04)[1]
Ceased operationsJanuary 4, 2012 (2012-01-04)
(merged with Pinnacle Airlines to form Endeavor Air)
Hubs
Frequent-flyer program
Alliance
Parent company
HeadquartersEagan, Minnesota, United States[2]
Key peopleJohn Spanjers (President)

History edit

Mesaba (from the Ojibwe language, misaabe: "Soaring Eagle")[4][5] was founded in 1944 by Gordy Newstrom in the Mesabi Range city of Coleraine, Minnesota and started operations in the same year under the name of Mesaba Aviation. It had one airplane, a Piper Cub purchased for $1,300, and it was used to shuttle employees of the Blandin Paper Mill Company from Grand Rapids, Minnesota to Minneapolis. In 1950 Newstrom moved the company to Grand Rapids.[6]

In 1973, the Halverson family of Duluth, Minnesota, bought Mesaba from Newstrom. Subsequently, they started regularly scheduled airline services serving Spencer, Iowa, Ely, Virginia, and Duluth.[6]

The Swenson family of Thief River Falls, Minnesota, purchased Mesaba Aviation in 1977. They took the company public in 1982[7] as the airline began flying to destinations in Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota with Beechcraft 99 commuter turboprops.[6]

In 1983, Mesaba became a codeshare partner of Republic Airlines, flying regional and commuter turboprop aircraft from small regional communities to the Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport. In 1986, after the merger of Republic Airlines and Northwest Orient Airlines, Mesaba transitioned its codeshare partnership and began operations as a Northwest Airlink carrier on behalf of Northwest Airlines.[6]

Mesaba began feeder service from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport to small airports across the east and midwest utilizing Fokker F27 and Fairchild Metro turboprop aircraft in 1988. Maintenance bases were established both in Detroit and Wausau, Wisconsin. The same year, Mesaba managed to add an additional 325 employees. It also expanded its network to four new routes including Cleveland, Dayton and Akron in Ohio, and Erie, Pennsylvania.[6]

In 1991, Mesaba built two new hangar facilities, in Detroit and Wausau, Wisconsin, and added the first of 25 de Havilland Canada DHC-8 Dash 8 turboprop aircraft, leased from Northwest Airlines.[6]

In 1995, Mesaba and Northwest reached an agreement to provide service with Saab 340 turboprop aircraft.[6] By 1997, Mesaba added additional flights to several new cities including Aspen, Colorado, Bozeman, Montana and Montreal in Canada.[6] In 1999, Forbes placed Mesaba at number 41 on their list of Top 200 Small Companies in America.[6]

Growth into jet operations edit

 
A Mesaba Airlines Saab 340 in NWA Airlink livery shortly after takeoff from Minneapolis/St. Paul International Airport on February 28, 2009.
 
A Mesaba-operated Avro RJ85 taxiing at Detroit Metropolitan Airport in 2003

The Northwest Airlines hub in Memphis was exclusively served by Airlink partner Express Airlines I, which later operated as Pinnacle Airlines and is now Endeavor Air, until 1997 when Mesaba initiated its first jet aircraft service using the Avro RJ85, the first jetliner type to be flown by either Airlink airline. The Avro RJ85 jetliner, which was a later model version of the BAe 146-200 featuring an improved cabin and more efficient engines, was operated on Northwest Jetlink flights with the aircraft being configured with 16 first class seats and 53 coach seats. This marked the first time a regional airline had offered first class as well as a coach on a regional jet aircraft. Mesaba was split off at this time into Airways Corporation in order to address objections from mainline pilots flying for Northwest concerning Mesaba's operation of a jet fleet. Mesaba also became the first regional airline to have a first class seating option via the Avro RJ85 jet, with this British-built four-engine aircraft being approximately twice as large as the 50-passenger regional jets manufactured by Canadair and Embraer. Eventually, as Pinnacle transitioned to an Bombardier CRJ regional jet fleet, Mesaba took over Northwest Airlink Saab 340 turboprop operations.

In 2000, the company took delivery of its final Avro RJ85 jet, along with eleven new Saab 340 turboprop aircraft. This made Mesaba the operator of the largest fleet of Avro RJ85 aircraft in the world with 36 of the type, and the second-largest operator of the Saab 340.

After the September 11 terrorist attacks, Mesaba was forced to reduce its workforce by 400 employees to achieve cost savings.[8] In the fall of 2003, Northwest wanted to retire the Avro jet fleet, which comprised about half of Mesaba's revenue. They were inefficient and aging, according to Northwest. However, Mesaba was able to negotiate a deal with Northwest which enabled the Avro fleet to remain in service. In 2005, Mesaba began receiving fifteen new Canadair CRJ regional jets that would eventually replace the larger Avro jets.[citation needed]

Bankruptcy edit

On September 14, 2005, Northwest Airlines filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection.[9] Subsequently, the airline withheld over US$25 million in payments from their regional partners, Mesaba and Pinnacle. Northwest proceeded to announce plans to ground the entire Avro jet fleet by Q1 2007, ten Saab 340B aircraft by January 2006, and also halt the delivery of the 13 remaining CRJs, leaving Mesaba with an awkward and expensive fleet of two aircraft types. Facing rising fuel costs, downsizing plans, and lack of income from Northwest, Mesaba filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy on October 13, 2005.[10]

In an interview in January 2006, Mesaba President John Spanjers announced that the Mesaba fleet would be cut in half by the end of the year. Twelve Avro RJ85 jets had already been removed from the fleet, and the balance would be grounded by the end of the year. Ten Saab 340 "B" model aircraft were returned to Pinnacle Airlines (from whom they were leased) during January 2006 while the three remaining "A" model Saab 340's and the two Bombardier CRJ regional jets that had been delivered to Mesaba prior to bankruptcy would leave the fleet before mid-year. These changes left Mesaba with a fleet of 49 Saab 340 turboprops.[citation needed]

On April 14, 2006, the company announced reductions of the Avro RJ85 fleet, at Northwest Airlines' direction. The RJ85 jets ceased flying out of Memphis on June 8, Minneapolis/St. Paul on October 31, and Detroit on December 4, 2006. Separately it was announced that one of the two 50-seat CRJ-200 regional jets operated by Mesaba would be transferred to Northwest in order to initiate flying operations (expected in late 2006) for newly formed Northwest Airlines subsidiary Compass Airlines.

By the end of October 2006, all three of the major unions representing the pilots,[11] flight attendants,[12] and mechanics[13][dead link] reached tentative agreements that still needed to be approved by the membership. On November 27, 2006, the three unions announced that their membership had ratified the new agreements.

In December 2006, Northwest Airlines planned to purchase Mesaba Airlines from owner MAIR Holdings and operate it as a wholly owned subsidiary. Tentative agreements concerning the sale were made; however, the merger could not have been approved without going through bankruptcy board proceedings and approvals of regulators and various interest groups. On April 24, 2007, Mesaba Airlines emerged from bankruptcy protection and was officially acquired by Northwest Airlines.[14]

With the merging of Northwest Airlines into Delta Air Lines, Mesaba underwent numerous changes as a subsidiary of the new company. A portion of the Saab 340 fleet was relocated to Atlanta. Delta also allocated five more Bombardier CRJ-900 regional jets to Mesaba to be operated out of Delta's Salt Lake City hub. In 2009, several routes were added, utilizing the new CRJ-900s and the existing Saab 340 aircraft.

Fined for not deplaning passengers edit

On November 24, 2009, Mesaba was one of three airlines, including Continental Airlines and ExpressJet, fined by the US Department of Transportation (DOT) for delaying passengers from deplaning for over six hours overnight in Rochester, MN on August 8, 2009. Mesaba's civil penalty was US$75,000, 50% more than the fine for Continental and ExpressJet.[15] It was the first fine ever from the DOT for misconduct related to passengers' being held in planes on the tarmac for an extended time.

When the ExpressJet flight was diverted to Rochester due to bad weather in Minneapolis, Mesaba personnel in the Rochester terminal agreed in advance to help deplane the passengers. However, when the plane landed, Mesaba personnel reneged, stating that there were no TSA personnel in the terminal. The DOT stated that the rules for such circumstances allow passengers to be deplaned and kept in a secure area, even when there are no TSA personnel available. The DOT ruled that the actions by Mesaba personnel constituted an "unfair and deceptive practice" because they had agreed to deplane the passengers. Continental and ExpressJet were fined because they did not follow their own internal procedures and passenger commitments, and were ultimately responsible for the passengers' welfare.[15]

Since the incident, the ramp personnel in Rochester along with other ground stations handled by Mesaba, Comair, and Compass, have since been merged and renamed Regional Elite Airline Services (REAS).

Sale to Pinnacle edit

On July 1, 2010, Delta Air Lines sold Mesaba to Pinnacle Airlines Corporation for $62 million.[16] The same day, Pinnacle Airlines Corporation announced that they intended to have Mesaba Airlines operate an all-turboprop fleet, whereas sister company, Pinnacle Airlines, would remain an all-jet operator. It was also announced that Pinnacle's other subsidiary, Colgan Air, would cease to exist, and Mesaba would inherit the Colgan fleet of Saab 340s and Bombardier Q400s. In time, all aircraft and personnel were transferred to Pinnacle Airlines.[2][dead link][17][dead link]

In 2011, Mesaba Airlines began operating flights out of New York City's LaGuardia Airport for US Airways under the US Airways Express brand. This codeshare service utilized Saab 340 aircraft and replaced the service that was being operated by Colgan Air.

Ultimately Colgan's Bombardier Q400 turboprops were never transferred to Mesaba as they were retired from service by United Express, whom they operated for on a code sharing basis on behalf of United Airlines, before the transition from Colgan to Mesaba took place.

On January 4, 2012, Mesaba was folded into Pinnacle Airlines. Mesaba's operating certificate was surrendered on July 31, 2012. Mesaba Airlines ended operations as one of the world's safest air carriers with no fatalities recorded during its 68 years of operations.

Awards edit

In early 1998, in recognition of the successful introduction of two new airliner types to the fleet (the Saab 340 and the Avro RJ85) while maintaining excellent operating performance, Mesaba Airlines was presented with the Air Transport World (ATW) "Regional Airline of the Year for 1997" award. Saab AB painted two new Saab 340 aircraft in special commemorative liveries celebrating both the award and Mesaba's 25th anniversary of scheduled airline service.

On August 31, 2005, Mesaba Airlines was named the winner of the 2005 Operational Excellence Award by AIG Aviation, a U.S. based underwriter of aviation insurance. The award has been presented only four times since its creation in 1998 and recognizes clients that exhibit a strong commitment to building quality safety and loss prevention programs. Mesaba was the unanimous selection out of an entry pool of more than 650 companies.[18]

Destinations edit

Over the years, Mesaba grew to operate a fleet of turboprop and turbofan powered airliners from Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, Memphis International Airport, John F. Kennedy International Airport, Salt Lake City International Airport and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on code sharing flights primarily to small-to-medium-sized cities on behalf of its major airline partners.

Mesaba began operating as US Airways Express on behalf of US Airways in March 2011, replacing Colgan Air service, with seven Saab 340 aircraft to eight destinations served from New York LaGuardia Airport: Charlottesville, VA; Manchester, NH; Ithaca, NY; Syracuse, NY; Providence, RI; and Washington Dulles, as well as Martha's Vineyard, MA and Nantucket, MA with both of these destinations being served on a seasonal basis.

Destinations in 1981 edit

Mesaba was a small independent commuter air carrier at this time in June 1981 operating Beechcraft 99 turboprop aircraft on just one linear route: Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN - Brainerd, MN - Grand Rapids, MN.[19]

Destinations in 1986 edit

Mesaba was operating Northwest Airlink code sharing flights in June 1986 for Northwest Airlines (which was operating as Northwest Orient at this time) with 19-passenger Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner ("Metro III" model) and 48-passenger Fokker F27 turboprops serving the following destinations:[20]

Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Minneapolis/St. Paul edit

Those destinations noted in bold were served in May 1999 by Mesaba with a Avro RJ85 jet aircraft operating as Northwest Jetlink code sharing flights from the Northwest hub located at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP) with Northwest Airlink code share service from MSP to other destinations being operated by Mesaba with Saab 340 turboprop aircraft at this time:[21]

According to the Official Airline Guide (OAG), by October 1999 Mesaba had extended its Northwest Jetlink Avro RJ85 service from the Northwest hub in Minneapolis/St. Paul to Green Bay, WI, Kalamazoo, MI, La Crosse, WI, Rochester, MN and Saginaw, MI in addition to the above destinations listed in bold.[22]

Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Memphis edit

In May 1999, Mesaba was operating all of its Northwest Airlines code sharing flights from the Northwest hub located at the Memphis International Airport (MEM) with Avro RJ85 jet aircraft with these Northwest Jetlink destinations noted in bold:[21]

Another regional air carrier, Express Airlines I, was also operating code sharing flights at this time from Memphis for Northwest utilizing turboprop aircraft for its Northwest Airlink service.[23][dead link]

According to the Official Airline Guide (OAG), by October 1999 Mesaba had extended its Northwest Jetlink Avro RJ85 service from the Northwest hub in Memphis to Grand Rapids, MI and Raleigh/Durham, NC.[24]

Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Detroit edit

Those destinations noted in bold were served in May 1999 by Mesaba with Avro RJ85 jet aircraft operating as Northwest Jetlink code sharing flights from the Northwest hub located at the Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport (DTW) with Northwest Airlink code share service from DTW to other destinations being operated by Mesaba with Saab 340 turboprop aircraft as this time:[21]

According to the Official Airline Guide (OAG), by October 1999 Mesaba had extended its Northwest Jetlink Avro RJ85 service from the Northwest hub in Detroit to Flint, MI, Lexington, KY, Saginaw, MI, South Bend, IN and Traverse City, MI in addition to the destinations listed above in bold.[25]

Fleet edit

The Mesaba Airlines fleet consisted of the following aircraft (as of September 7, 2011):[26][dead link]

Aircraft Total Options Passengers Notes
F Y Total
Bombardier CRJ-200 19 0 50 50
Bombardier CRJ-900 41 29 12 64 76

Retired edit

Aircraft Year Retired Notes Replacement
Fokker F27 Scrapped Dash 8-100
Beechcraft Model 99 Metroliner
Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner (Metro III model) 1997 Converted to freighters or operated in the Bahamas Saab 340
de Havilland Canada Dash 8-100 1998 Sold to Piedmont Airlines Saab 340
Saab 340 2011[27] Bombardier CRJ-200
Avro RJ85 2006 Operated as Northwest Jetlink flights on behalf of Northwest Airlines. Aircraft were configured with 16 first class seats and 53 coach seats.[28] Majority transferred to Cityjet (Dublin, Ireland) Bombardier CRJ-900

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Norwood, Tom; Wegg, John (2002). (3rd ed.). Sandpoint, ID: Airways International. ISBN 0-9653993-8-9. Archived from the original on 2016-11-28.
  2. ^ a b http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/oct/24/pinnacle-airlines-move-mesaba-headquarters-memphis/?partner=yahoo_feeds [bare URL]
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on April 24, 2009. Retrieved May 19, 2009.
  4. ^ Upham, Warren (1920). Minnesota Geographic Names: This Origin and Historical Significance in Collections of the Minnesota Historical Society. Minnesota Historical Society. pp. 486 and 504.
  5. ^ John D. Nichols and Earl Nyholm. A Concise Dictionary of Minnesota Ojibwe. University of Minnesota Press (University of Minnesota: Minneapolis, 1995) ISBN 0-8166-2427-5
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i "History of Mesaba Holdings, Inc". Funding Universe. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  7. ^ Cohen, Ben (October 28, 2008). "Lowell Swenson acquired Arctic Enterprises". Star Tribune. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  8. ^ "Examining Minnesota's Economy After September 11th: Strategies for Workforce and Business Recovery". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  9. ^ Isidore, Chris (September 14, 2005). "No. 4 Northwest Airlines follows No.3 Delta into bankruptcy". CNN Money. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  10. ^ "Mesaba follows Northwest Airlines into bankruptcy". Minnesota Public Radio. October 13, 2005. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  11. ^ . 2006-10-29. Archived from the original on 2006-10-29. Retrieved 2023-12-06.
  12. ^ "Mesaba flight attendants reach deal". MPR News. 2006-10-30. Retrieved 2023-12-06.
  13. ^ Mesaba Aviation Mechanics Agree To Accept Wage Cuts (Detroit Free Press: November 1, 2006)
  14. ^ "Northwest Airlines Acquires Mesaba Airlines". April 24, 2007. Archived from the original on September 9, 2012.
  15. ^ a b Maxon, Terry (November 24, 2009). "DOT hands out $175,000 in fines for Rochester fiasco". Dallas News. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  16. ^ Drum, Bruce (July 1, 2010). "Delta agrees to sell Mesaba Airlines to Pinnacle Airlines". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  17. ^ http://www.inforum.com/event/article/id/338016/ [dead link]
  18. ^ Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal: September 1, 2005
  19. ^ "Mesaba Airlines June 12, 1981 Route Map". www.departedflights.com. Retrieved 2023-12-06.
  20. ^ "Northwest Airlines History Center WELCOME - Northwest Airlines History Center". Retrieved 2023-12-06.
  21. ^ a b c . www.departedflights.com. Archived from the original on July 9, 2021.
  22. ^ Oct. 1, 1999 OAG North America Pocket Flight Guide, Minneapolis/St. Paul flight schedules
  23. ^ https://www.departedfligthts.com/NWairlink0599.html
  24. ^ Oct. 1, 1999 OAG North America Pocket Flight Guide, Memphis flight schedules
  25. ^ Oct. 1, 1999 OAG North America Pocket Flight Guide, Detroit flight schedules
  26. ^ Mesaba Airlines fleet list at ch-aviation.ch. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
  27. ^ "Mesaba Airlines Fleet Details and History". www.planespotters.net. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  28. ^ OAG Flight Guide Supplement, January–March 2006, Aircraft seating plans, Northwest Airlines ARJ (Avro Regional Jet) seat map

External links edit

  • Mesaba Airlines
  • Mesaba Airlines fleet age
  • Unofficial bankruptcy information

mesaba, airlines, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, . This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Mesaba Aviation Inc operating as Mesaba Airlines was a regional airline in the United States that operated from 1944 until 2012 when it merged with Pinnacle Airlines to form Endeavor Air It was based in Eagan Minnesota 3 From 2010 to 2012 the airline was a wholly owned subsidiary of Pinnacle Airlines Corp with code sharing flights operated as Delta Connection for Delta Air Lines and US Airways Express for US Airways Previously the airline operated code sharing service as Northwest Airlink and Northwest Jetlink on behalf of Northwest Airlines which subsequently merged with Delta Mesaba also previously operated connecting flight services in association with Republic Airlines before this air carrier was subsequently merged into Northwest Mesaba Airlines effectively ceased operations on January 4 2012 when all aircraft and personnel were transitioned to the Pinnacle Airlines operating certificate Mesaba s operating certificate was surrendered on July 31 2012 Mesaba AirlinesIATA ICAO Callsign XJ MES MESABAFounded1944 1944 as Mesaba Aviation 1 Commenced operationsFebruary 4 1974 1974 02 04 1 Ceased operationsJanuary 4 2012 2012 01 04 merged with Pinnacle Airlines to form Endeavor Air HubsDetroitMemphisMinneapolis St PaulNew York LaGuardiaFrequent flyer programSkyMiles Delta WorldPerks Northwest Dividend Miles US Airways AllianceSkyTeam Delta Northwest Star Alliance US Airways Parent companyMesaba Holdings 1995 2007 Northwest Airlines 2007 2010 Delta Air Lines Jan 2010 Jun 2010 Pinnacle Airlines Corp 2010 2012 HeadquartersEagan Minnesota United States 2 Key peopleJohn Spanjers President Contents 1 History 1 1 Growth into jet operations 1 2 Bankruptcy 1 3 Fined for not deplaning passengers 1 4 Sale to Pinnacle 2 Awards 3 Destinations 3 1 Destinations in 1981 3 2 Destinations in 1986 3 3 Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Minneapolis St Paul 3 4 Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Memphis 3 5 Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Detroit 4 Fleet 4 1 Retired 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editMesaba from the Ojibwe language misaabe Soaring Eagle 4 5 was founded in 1944 by Gordy Newstrom in the Mesabi Range city of Coleraine Minnesota and started operations in the same year under the name of Mesaba Aviation It had one airplane a Piper Cub purchased for 1 300 and it was used to shuttle employees of the Blandin Paper Mill Company from Grand Rapids Minnesota to Minneapolis In 1950 Newstrom moved the company to Grand Rapids 6 In 1973 the Halverson family of Duluth Minnesota bought Mesaba from Newstrom Subsequently they started regularly scheduled airline services serving Spencer Iowa Ely Virginia and Duluth 6 The Swenson family of Thief River Falls Minnesota purchased Mesaba Aviation in 1977 They took the company public in 1982 7 as the airline began flying to destinations in Minnesota North Dakota and South Dakota with Beechcraft 99 commuter turboprops 6 In 1983 Mesaba became a codeshare partner of Republic Airlines flying regional and commuter turboprop aircraft from small regional communities to the Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport In 1986 after the merger of Republic Airlines and Northwest Orient Airlines Mesaba transitioned its codeshare partnership and began operations as a Northwest Airlink carrier on behalf of Northwest Airlines 6 Mesaba began feeder service from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport to small airports across the east and midwest utilizing Fokker F27 and Fairchild Metro turboprop aircraft in 1988 Maintenance bases were established both in Detroit and Wausau Wisconsin The same year Mesaba managed to add an additional 325 employees It also expanded its network to four new routes including Cleveland Dayton and Akron in Ohio and Erie Pennsylvania 6 In 1991 Mesaba built two new hangar facilities in Detroit and Wausau Wisconsin and added the first of 25 de Havilland Canada DHC 8 Dash 8 turboprop aircraft leased from Northwest Airlines 6 In 1995 Mesaba and Northwest reached an agreement to provide service with Saab 340 turboprop aircraft 6 By 1997 Mesaba added additional flights to several new cities including Aspen Colorado Bozeman Montana and Montreal in Canada 6 In 1999 Forbes placed Mesaba at number 41 on their list of Top 200 Small Companies in America 6 Growth into jet operations edit nbsp A Mesaba Airlines Saab 340 in NWA Airlink livery shortly after takeoff from Minneapolis St Paul International Airport on February 28 2009 nbsp A Mesaba operated Avro RJ85 taxiing at Detroit Metropolitan Airport in 2003 The Northwest Airlines hub in Memphis was exclusively served by Airlink partner Express Airlines I which later operated as Pinnacle Airlines and is now Endeavor Air until 1997 when Mesaba initiated its first jet aircraft service using the Avro RJ85 the first jetliner type to be flown by either Airlink airline The Avro RJ85 jetliner which was a later model version of the BAe 146 200 featuring an improved cabin and more efficient engines was operated on Northwest Jetlink flights with the aircraft being configured with 16 first class seats and 53 coach seats This marked the first time a regional airline had offered first class as well as a coach on a regional jet aircraft Mesaba was split off at this time into Airways Corporation in order to address objections from mainline pilots flying for Northwest concerning Mesaba s operation of a jet fleet Mesaba also became the first regional airline to have a first class seating option via the Avro RJ85 jet with this British built four engine aircraft being approximately twice as large as the 50 passenger regional jets manufactured by Canadair and Embraer Eventually as Pinnacle transitioned to an Bombardier CRJ regional jet fleet Mesaba took over Northwest Airlink Saab 340 turboprop operations In 2000 the company took delivery of its final Avro RJ85 jet along with eleven new Saab 340 turboprop aircraft This made Mesaba the operator of the largest fleet of Avro RJ85 aircraft in the world with 36 of the type and the second largest operator of the Saab 340 After the September 11 terrorist attacks Mesaba was forced to reduce its workforce by 400 employees to achieve cost savings 8 In the fall of 2003 Northwest wanted to retire the Avro jet fleet which comprised about half of Mesaba s revenue They were inefficient and aging according to Northwest However Mesaba was able to negotiate a deal with Northwest which enabled the Avro fleet to remain in service In 2005 Mesaba began receiving fifteen new Canadair CRJ regional jets that would eventually replace the larger Avro jets citation needed Bankruptcy edit On September 14 2005 Northwest Airlines filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection 9 Subsequently the airline withheld over US 25 million in payments from their regional partners Mesaba and Pinnacle Northwest proceeded to announce plans to ground the entire Avro jet fleet by Q1 2007 ten Saab 340B aircraft by January 2006 and also halt the delivery of the 13 remaining CRJs leaving Mesaba with an awkward and expensive fleet of two aircraft types Facing rising fuel costs downsizing plans and lack of income from Northwest Mesaba filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy on October 13 2005 10 In an interview in January 2006 Mesaba President John Spanjers announced that the Mesaba fleet would be cut in half by the end of the year Twelve Avro RJ85 jets had already been removed from the fleet and the balance would be grounded by the end of the year Ten Saab 340 B model aircraft were returned to Pinnacle Airlines from whom they were leased during January 2006 while the three remaining A model Saab 340 s and the two Bombardier CRJ regional jets that had been delivered to Mesaba prior to bankruptcy would leave the fleet before mid year These changes left Mesaba with a fleet of 49 Saab 340 turboprops citation needed On April 14 2006 the company announced reductions of the Avro RJ85 fleet at Northwest Airlines direction The RJ85 jets ceased flying out of Memphis on June 8 Minneapolis St Paul on October 31 and Detroit on December 4 2006 Separately it was announced that one of the two 50 seat CRJ 200 regional jets operated by Mesaba would be transferred to Northwest in order to initiate flying operations expected in late 2006 for newly formed Northwest Airlines subsidiary Compass Airlines By the end of October 2006 all three of the major unions representing the pilots 11 flight attendants 12 and mechanics 13 dead link reached tentative agreements that still needed to be approved by the membership On November 27 2006 the three unions announced that their membership had ratified the new agreements In December 2006 Northwest Airlines planned to purchase Mesaba Airlines from owner MAIR Holdings and operate it as a wholly owned subsidiary Tentative agreements concerning the sale were made however the merger could not have been approved without going through bankruptcy board proceedings and approvals of regulators and various interest groups On April 24 2007 Mesaba Airlines emerged from bankruptcy protection and was officially acquired by Northwest Airlines 14 With the merging of Northwest Airlines into Delta Air Lines Mesaba underwent numerous changes as a subsidiary of the new company A portion of the Saab 340 fleet was relocated to Atlanta Delta also allocated five more Bombardier CRJ 900 regional jets to Mesaba to be operated out of Delta s Salt Lake City hub In 2009 several routes were added utilizing the new CRJ 900s and the existing Saab 340 aircraft Fined for not deplaning passengers edit Main article 2009 Rochester Minn airport tarmac stranding incident On November 24 2009 Mesaba was one of three airlines including Continental Airlines and ExpressJet fined by the US Department of Transportation DOT for delaying passengers from deplaning for over six hours overnight in Rochester MN on August 8 2009 Mesaba s civil penalty was US 75 000 50 more than the fine for Continental and ExpressJet 15 It was the first fine ever from the DOT for misconduct related to passengers being held in planes on the tarmac for an extended time When the ExpressJet flight was diverted to Rochester due to bad weather in Minneapolis Mesaba personnel in the Rochester terminal agreed in advance to help deplane the passengers However when the plane landed Mesaba personnel reneged stating that there were no TSA personnel in the terminal The DOT stated that the rules for such circumstances allow passengers to be deplaned and kept in a secure area even when there are no TSA personnel available The DOT ruled that the actions by Mesaba personnel constituted an unfair and deceptive practice because they had agreed to deplane the passengers Continental and ExpressJet were fined because they did not follow their own internal procedures and passenger commitments and were ultimately responsible for the passengers welfare 15 Since the incident the ramp personnel in Rochester along with other ground stations handled by Mesaba Comair and Compass have since been merged and renamed Regional Elite Airline Services REAS Sale to Pinnacle edit On July 1 2010 Delta Air Lines sold Mesaba to Pinnacle Airlines Corporation for 62 million 16 The same day Pinnacle Airlines Corporation announced that they intended to have Mesaba Airlines operate an all turboprop fleet whereas sister company Pinnacle Airlines would remain an all jet operator It was also announced that Pinnacle s other subsidiary Colgan Air would cease to exist and Mesaba would inherit the Colgan fleet of Saab 340s and Bombardier Q400s In time all aircraft and personnel were transferred to Pinnacle Airlines 2 dead link 17 dead link In 2011 Mesaba Airlines began operating flights out of New York City s LaGuardia Airport for US Airways under the US Airways Express brand This codeshare service utilized Saab 340 aircraft and replaced the service that was being operated by Colgan Air Ultimately Colgan s Bombardier Q400 turboprops were never transferred to Mesaba as they were retired from service by United Express whom they operated for on a code sharing basis on behalf of United Airlines before the transition from Colgan to Mesaba took place On January 4 2012 Mesaba was folded into Pinnacle Airlines Mesaba s operating certificate was surrendered on July 31 2012 Mesaba Airlines ended operations as one of the world s safest air carriers with no fatalities recorded during its 68 years of operations Awards editIn early 1998 in recognition of the successful introduction of two new airliner types to the fleet the Saab 340 and the Avro RJ85 while maintaining excellent operating performance Mesaba Airlines was presented with the Air Transport World ATW Regional Airline of the Year for 1997 award Saab AB painted two new Saab 340 aircraft in special commemorative liveries celebrating both the award and Mesaba s 25th anniversary of scheduled airline service On August 31 2005 Mesaba Airlines was named the winner of the 2005 Operational Excellence Award by AIG Aviation a U S based underwriter of aviation insurance The award has been presented only four times since its creation in 1998 and recognizes clients that exhibit a strong commitment to building quality safety and loss prevention programs Mesaba was the unanimous selection out of an entry pool of more than 650 companies 18 Destinations editOver the years Mesaba grew to operate a fleet of turboprop and turbofan powered airliners from Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport Memphis International Airport John F Kennedy International Airport Salt Lake City International Airport and Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport on code sharing flights primarily to small to medium sized cities on behalf of its major airline partners Mesaba began operating as US Airways Express on behalf of US Airways in March 2011 replacing Colgan Air service with seven Saab 340 aircraft to eight destinations served from New York LaGuardia Airport Charlottesville VA Manchester NH Ithaca NY Syracuse NY Providence RI and Washington Dulles as well as Martha s Vineyard MA and Nantucket MA with both of these destinations being served on a seasonal basis Destinations in 1981 edit Mesaba was a small independent commuter air carrier at this time in June 1981 operating Beechcraft 99 turboprop aircraft on just one linear route Minneapolis St Paul MN Brainerd MN Grand Rapids MN 19 Destinations in 1986 edit Mesaba was operating Northwest Airlink code sharing flights in June 1986 for Northwest Airlines which was operating as Northwest Orient at this time with 19 passenger Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner Metro III model and 48 passenger Fokker F27 turboprops serving the following destinations 20 Aberdeen SD Bemidji MN Brainerd MN Brookings SD Cedar Rapids IA Des Moines IA Devils Lake ND Duluth MN Grand Rapids MN Hibbing MN Huron SD Jamestown ND Minneapolis St Paul MN Hub Moline IL Mitchell SD Pierre SD Rapid City SD Rochester MN Sioux Falls SD Thief River Falls MN Wausau Stevens Point WI Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Minneapolis St Paul edit Those destinations noted in bold were served in May 1999 by Mesaba with a Avro RJ85 jet aircraft operating as Northwest Jetlink code sharing flights from the Northwest hub located at the Minneapolis St Paul International Airport MSP with Northwest Airlink code share service from MSP to other destinations being operated by Mesaba with Saab 340 turboprop aircraft at this time 21 Aberdeen SD Appleton WI Aspen CO Bemidji MN Bismarck ND Bloomington IL Normal IL Brainerd MN Cedar Rapids IA Cincinnati OH Des Moines IA Dubuque IA Duluth MN Eau Claire WI Escanaba MI Ely MN Fargo ND Flint MI Fort Dodge IA Grand Forks ND Grand Rapids MN Green Bay WI Hibbing MN Houghton MI Hancock MI International Falls MN Kenora Ontario Canada La Crosse WI Lincoln NE Madison WI Marquette MI Mason City IA Minneapolis St Paul MN Hub Moline IL Omaha NE Pellston MI Peoria IL Pittsburgh PA Pierre SD Rapid City SD Regina Saskatchewan Canada Rhinelander WI Rochester MN Rockford IL St Cloud MN St Louis MO Sioux City IA Sioux Falls SD Steamboat Springs CO served via the Yampa Valley Airport Thief River Falls MN Thunder Bay Ontario Canada Traverse City MI Waterloo IA Watertown SD Wausau Stevens Point WI White Plains NY served via the Westchester County Airport According to the Official Airline Guide OAG by October 1999 Mesaba had extended its Northwest Jetlink Avro RJ85 service from the Northwest hub in Minneapolis St Paul to Green Bay WI Kalamazoo MI La Crosse WI Rochester MN and Saginaw MI in addition to the above destinations listed in bold 22 Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Memphis edit In May 1999 Mesaba was operating all of its Northwest Airlines code sharing flights from the Northwest hub located at the Memphis International Airport MEM with Avro RJ85 jet aircraft with these Northwest Jetlink destinations noted in bold 21 Atlanta GA Cincinnati OH Dallas Fort Worth TX Fayetteville AR Huntsville AL Knoxville TN Memphis TN Hub St Louis MO Wichita KS Another regional air carrier Express Airlines I was also operating code sharing flights at this time from Memphis for Northwest utilizing turboprop aircraft for its Northwest Airlink service 23 dead link According to the Official Airline Guide OAG by October 1999 Mesaba had extended its Northwest Jetlink Avro RJ85 service from the Northwest hub in Memphis to Grand Rapids MI and Raleigh Durham NC 24 Destinations served in 1999 from the Northwest Airlines hub in Detroit edit Those destinations noted in bold were served in May 1999 by Mesaba with Avro RJ85 jet aircraft operating as Northwest Jetlink code sharing flights from the Northwest hub located at the Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport DTW with Northwest Airlink code share service from DTW to other destinations being operated by Mesaba with Saab 340 turboprop aircraft as this time 21 Akron Canton OH Allentown PA Alpena MI Appleton WI Benton Harbor MI Binghamton NY Bloomington IL Normal IL Buffalo NY Champaign Urbana IL Charleston WV Cincinnati OH Cleveland OH Columbus OH Dayton OH Detroit MI Hub Des Moines IA Duluth MN Elmira NY Corning NY Erie PA Escanaba MI Evansville IN Flint MI Fort Wayne IN Green Bay WI Greensboro NC Harrisburg PA Houghton MI Hancock MI Kalamazoo MI Knoxville TN Lafayette IN Lansing MI Lexington KY London Ontario Canada Louisville KY Madison WI Marquette MI Montreal Quebec Canada Muskegon MI Ottawa Ontario Canada Owensboro KY Pellston MI Peoria IL Pittsburgh PA Portland ME Rhinelander WI Roanoke VA Rockford IL Rochester NY Saginaw MI Sault Ste Marie MI South Bend IN State College PA Toledo OH Traverse City MI Wausau WI Stevens Point WI White Plains NY served via the Westchester County Airport Youngstown OH According to the Official Airline Guide OAG by October 1999 Mesaba had extended its Northwest Jetlink Avro RJ85 service from the Northwest hub in Detroit to Flint MI Lexington KY Saginaw MI South Bend IN and Traverse City MI in addition to the destinations listed above in bold 25 Fleet editThe Mesaba Airlines fleet consisted of the following aircraft as of September 7 2011 26 dead link Aircraft Total Options Passengers Notes F Y Total Bombardier CRJ 200 19 0 50 50 Bombardier CRJ 900 41 29 12 64 76 Retired edit Aircraft Year Retired Notes Replacement Fokker F27 Scrapped Dash 8 100 Beechcraft Model 99 Metroliner Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner Metro III model 1997 Converted to freighters or operated in the Bahamas Saab 340 de Havilland Canada Dash 8 100 1998 Sold to Piedmont Airlines Saab 340 Saab 340 2011 27 Bombardier CRJ 200 Avro RJ85 2006 Operated as Northwest Jetlink flights on behalf of Northwest Airlines Aircraft were configured with 16 first class seats and 53 coach seats 28 Majority transferred to Cityjet Dublin Ireland Bombardier CRJ 900See also edit2009 Rochester Minn airport tarmac stranding incident List of defunct airlines of the United StatesReferences edit a b Norwood Tom Wegg John 2002 North American Airlines Handbook 3rd ed Sandpoint ID Airways International ISBN 0 9653993 8 9 Archived from the original on 2016 11 28 a b http www commercialappeal com news 2011 oct 24 pinnacle airlines move mesaba headquarters memphis partner yahoo feeds bare URL Mesaba Airlines General Office Archived from the original on April 24 2009 Retrieved May 19 2009 Upham Warren 1920 Minnesota Geographic Names This Origin and Historical Significance in Collections of the Minnesota Historical Society Minnesota Historical Society pp 486 and 504 John D Nichols and Earl Nyholm A Concise Dictionary of Minnesota Ojibwe University of Minnesota Press University of Minnesota Minneapolis 1995 ISBN 0 8166 2427 5 a b c d e f g h i History of Mesaba Holdings Inc Funding Universe Retrieved July 21 2020 Cohen Ben October 28 2008 Lowell Swenson acquired Arctic Enterprises Star Tribune Retrieved July 21 2020 Examining Minnesota s Economy After September 11th Strategies for Workforce and Business Recovery U S Securities and Exchange Commission Retrieved July 21 2020 Isidore Chris September 14 2005 No 4 Northwest Airlines follows No 3 Delta into bankruptcy CNN Money Retrieved July 21 2020 Mesaba follows Northwest Airlines into bankruptcy Minnesota Public Radio October 13 2005 Retrieved July 21 2020 wcco com Mesaba Airlines Reaches Tentative Agreement 2006 10 29 Archived from the original on 2006 10 29 Retrieved 2023 12 06 Mesaba flight attendants reach deal MPR News 2006 10 30 Retrieved 2023 12 06 Mesaba Aviation Mechanics Agree To Accept Wage Cuts Detroit Free Press November 1 2006 Northwest Airlines Acquires Mesaba Airlines April 24 2007 Archived from the original on September 9 2012 a b Maxon Terry November 24 2009 DOT hands out 175 000 in fines for Rochester fiasco Dallas News Retrieved July 21 2020 Drum Bruce July 1 2010 Delta agrees to sell Mesaba Airlines to Pinnacle Airlines Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved July 21 2020 http www inforum com event article id 338016 dead link Minneapolis St Paul Business Journal September 1 2005 Mesaba Airlines June 12 1981 Route Map www departedflights com Retrieved 2023 12 06 Northwest Airlines History Center WELCOME Northwest Airlines History Center Retrieved 2023 12 06 a b c Northwest Airlink May 1999 Route Maps www departedflights com Archived from the original on July 9 2021 Oct 1 1999 OAG North America Pocket Flight Guide Minneapolis St Paul flight schedules https www departedfligthts com NWairlink0599 html Oct 1 1999 OAG North America Pocket Flight Guide Memphis flight schedules Oct 1 1999 OAG North America Pocket Flight Guide Detroit flight schedules Mesaba Airlines fleet list at ch aviation ch Retrieved 2010 05 16 Mesaba Airlines Fleet Details and History www planespotters net Retrieved 2021 12 09 OAG Flight Guide Supplement January March 2006 Aircraft seating plans Northwest Airlines ARJ Avro Regional Jet seat mapExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mesaba Airlines Mesaba Airlines Mesaba Airlines fleet age Official bankruptcy information Unofficial bankruptcy information Portals nbsp United States nbsp Companies nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mesaba Airlines amp oldid 1205882497, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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