Cape Air
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Cape Air | ||
---|---|---|
IATA 9K |
ICAO KAP |
Callsign CAIR |
Founded | 1989 | |
Hubs | Barnstable Municipal Airport Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport Boston Logan International Airport Indianapolis International Airport |
|
Fleet size | 55 | |
Destinations | 25 | |
Headquarters | Hyannis, Massachusetts | |
Key people | Daniel A. Wolf (CEO) | |
Website: http://www.flycapeair.com http://www.nantucketairlines.com |
Hyannis Air Service, Inc., trading as Cape Air, is an airline based in Hyannis, Massachusetts, USA. It operates scheduled passenger services in Florida, Indiana, New England, New York, the United States Virgin Islands, and Micronesia. Flights in Florida and Micronesia are operated as Continental Connection flights through a code share partnership with Continental Airlines. Flights between Hyannis, Massachusetts and Nantucket, Massachusetts are operated under the Nantucket Airlines brand, a wholly owned subsidiary of Cape Air. The airline's corporate headquarters is located at Barnstable Municipal Airport, Hyannis, and hubs are maintained at Boston Logan International Airport, Boston, Massachusetts, Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Tampa International Airport, Tampa, Florida, and Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport, Guam.[1]
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[edit] History
The airline was co-founded in 1989 by company pilot Dan Wolf and a few of his close friends. Initially Cape Air flew between Provincetown, MA and Boston, MA, but throughout the early 1990s new routes were added to destinations across Southeastern New England. Services in Florida and the Caribbean were added in the late 1990s and service in Micronesia commenced in 2004. In 1994, Cape Air and Nantucket Airlines merged and now offer hourly flights between Nantucket and Hyannis under the ACK Air label (ACK is the airport code for Nantucket).
In late 2007, the airline began a new round of expansion in the Northeast and Midwest. On November 1, 2007, the airline began service between Boston and Rutland, VT with three daily round-trips. The route is subsidized by the US Government under the Essential Air Service (EAS) program. With the help of a government grant, Cape Air expanded into Indiana on November 13, 2007, offering flights from Indianapolis to Evansville and South Bend.
The airline expanded into upstate New York in early 2008 following the sudden demise of Delta Connection carrier Big Sky Airlines. Cape Air began flying three daily round-trips on Essential Air Service routes from Boston to the Adirondack cities of Plattsburgh, NY and Saranac Lake, NY on February 12, 2008.
Cape Air will start to fly EAS routes out of Albany, NY to Watertown, Ogdensburg, and Massena, New York in the near future, expected before September. The company recently purchased four additional Cessna 402s to assist with the recent growth.
Cape Air is the largest independent regional airline in the United States and carried nearly 700,000 passengers in 2005. Loads have increased steadily since the company's expansion into other markets and with opening of five additional routes in the past year the upward trend should only continue. During peak tourist season Cape Air offers more than 850 daily flights system wide.
[edit] Services
Cape Air operates 9-passenger Cessna 402C Businessliners/Utililiners in Florida, Indiana, New England, and the Caribbean as well as 46-passenger ATR ATR-42-300s in the Pacific.
Cape Air flights in Micronesia are operated under the Continental Connection name through a codeshare program with Continental Airlines. Cape Air also provides Continental Connection service in Florida and the Caribbean but, operate under the Cape Air livery in those markets.
On February 14, 2007, low cost carrier JetBlue and Cape Air announced a codeshare partnership. The partnership provides JetBlue and Cape Air customers seamless connections to all the destinations served by both airlines from Boston Logan International Airport.[2]
Most flights between Hyannis and Nantucket are flown under the Nantucket Airlines name.
[edit] Destinations
[edit] Florida
(operated as Continental Connection)
- Fort Myers (Southwest Florida International Airport)
- Key West (Key West International Airport)
- Sarasota (Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport)
- Tampa (Tampa International Airport)
[edit] Northeast
- Albany (Albany International Airport)
- Boston (Logan International Airport) (Hub)
- Hyannis (Barnstable Municipal Airport) (Main Hub)
- Martha's Vineyard (Martha's Vineyard Airport)
- Massena, New York (Massena International Airport)
- Nantucket (Nantucket Memorial Airport) Select service is operated by Cape Air's sister airline, Nantucket Airlines
- New Bedford (New Bedford Regional Airport)
- Ogdensburg, New York (Ogdensburg International Airport)
- Plattsburgh, New York (Plattsburgh International Airport)
- Provincetown (Provincetown Municipal Airport)
- Providence (T. F. Green Airport)
- Rutland, Vermont (Rutland State Airport)
- Saranac Lake, New York (Adirondack Regional Airport)
- Watertown, New York (Watertown International Airport)
[edit] Midwest
- Indianapolis, Indiana (Indianapolis International Airport)
- South Bend, Indiana (South Bend Regional Airport)
- Evansville, Indiana (Evansville Regional Airport)
[edit] Caribbean
- British Virgin Islands
- Puerto Rico (United States)
- United States Virgin Islands
[edit] Mariana Islands (United States)
(operated as Continental Connection)
- Guam (Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport)
- Rota (Rota International Airport)
- Saipan (Saipan International Airport)
[edit] Nantucket Airlines
Nantucket Airlines, Cape Air's sister airline, operates Cape Air service under the Nantucket Airlines name. Flights depart hourly, and operate between Nantucket (Nantucket Memorial Airport) and Hyannis (Barnstable Municipal Airport).
[edit] Grounding of entire fleet
On June 12, 2007, Cape Air CEO Daniel Wolf announced the grounding of all of Cape Air's 49 Cessna 402 aircraft nationwide, after three in-flight engine failures. The problem was blamed on premature wear on the crankshaft counterweight. All 402 services were canceled for two days while the counterweights were inspected and replaced as necessary. Normal service resumed about four days after the initial fleet grounding.[citation needed]
[edit] Fleet
As of March 2007, Cape Air's fleet consists of the following aircraft:[1]
Type | Fleet | Seats | Aircraft Information |
---|---|---|---|
ATR 42-320 | 2 | 46 | Original fleet of 3 - one sold off |
Cessna 402C | 53 | 9 | 47 painted in Cape Air livery, 6 painted in Nantucket Airlines livery. |
[edit] References
- ^ a b "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International, 2007-04-03, pp. 60-61.
- ^ JetBlue Spreads its Wings in New England in marketing Partnership With Cape Air February 14, 2007
[edit] External links
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