shallowbridge.com shallowbridge.com
   Site Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Add Your Link >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Society & Communities

Estate & Realty

Self Enhancement

Home & Garden

Art & Creative

Medical Care

Shopping Online

Lifestyle & Fashion

Sports

Jobs & Careers

Events & News

Music & Entertainment

Policies & Law

Academics & Learning

Food & Recipe

Online & Board Games

Hygiene & Health

Companies & Business

Automobiles

Finance & Banking

Children & Teens

Travel & Vacation

Research & Science

Software & Networking


 

Site Home –› Travel & Vacation –› Air Travel
 

Jet Movements, Part 4

 

Comair Seeks to Void F/A Contract

Comair is seeking to void its contract with 1100 flight attendants in a bid to reduce costs in wake of its parent companys bankruptcy filing. Comair is owned by Delta Airlines.

Looking for employee concessions totaling $8.9 million from flight attendants alone, Comair is claiming they need the give backs in order to remain competitive with other regional carriers. Comair flight attendants earn between $16K for new hires to just over $40K for senior cabin crew.

MiGs and Aeroflot to Merge

Russias moribund aircraft industry is set to receive new life thanks to government and business support designed to revive Russias aircraft industry.

A single Kremlin controlled aircraft industry is being developed to unite the Soviet era airliners and fighter jets together under government control. With government and private funding in place, Russia hopes to reenter the aircraft market to compete against Boeing and Airbus. Both aircraft manufacturing companies are seeking to win lucrative Russian aircraft orders; Airbus recently inked a deal with Russia worth $25 billion for parts and design assistance.

The merged Russian company, to be called United Aircraft, will put six major design and manufacturing centers under a single roof: Sukhoi, MiG, Tupelov, Irkut, Ilyushin and Yakovlev. The companies had formed a consortium last year in anticipation of the merger.

The new company will be capitalized with $10 billon to start.

Airline Woes Down Under

Blaming a spike in fuel prices, Air New Zealand, the republics flag carrier, is planning on laying off 25% of its corporate staff in a bid to shave expenses by about $30 million per year.

Air New Zealand is also citing stiff competition on popular New Zealand to Australia routes for contributing to their loss of profits totaling 55%.

Author: Matthew Keegan
 
Author Bio:

Matthew Keegan

If you are looking for a successful and prolific article writer, than Matt Keegan is the man for you. As The Article Writer, Matt writes on a variety of topics including advocacy, automobiles, aviation, business, Christian themes, family, news, product reviews, travel, writing, and more. At present, Matt is a top ten writer on this site and a frequent contributor.

Matt writes web site content, ezine distribution [article marketing/SEO], for newsletters, and for print material. His speciality is topical writing.

In addition, Matt is the owner of a successful web design and marketing company based in North Carolina, USA. Matt manages several sites including two high performing business aviation sites: the Corporate Flight Attendant Community and the Aviation Employment Board.

This article can be searched using: air travel, air travel finder, cheap air flights air travel finder, cheap air flights travel tips
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Bird Watching Journals - Preserve Your Bird Watching Experiences
 
Heli Skiing in Pristine British Columbia
 
Reducing Wake Turbulence and Wing-Tip Vortices Using Contoured Winglet Designs
 
The Best Beaches in California
 
Adventure Summer Camps - Tips for Finding the Best Ones
 
Greek Travel Travelling in Athens Greece, Free Travel Tips, Electric Outlets in Rooms and Apartment
 
Try Paragliding! A Quick Introduction, Plus an Imaginary First Flight
 
Jet Movements, Part 4
 
Experience a Slovakian Stag Do in Popular Bratislava
 
Aspen Ski Vacation
 
 
 
Site Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Service  
Copyright © www.shallowbridge.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.