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Pinnacle Airlines
Pinnacleinclogo.png
IATA
9E
ICAO
FLG
Callsign
FLAGSHIP
Founded 1985 (as Express Airlines I)
Hubs As Delta Connection
Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport
Memphis International Airport
Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport
Focus cities Indianapolis International Airport
Frequent flyer program SkyMiles
Member lounge WorldClubs
Alliance SkyTeam
Fleet size 141
Destinations
Parent company Pinnacle Airlines Corp.
Headquarters Memphis, Tennessee
Key people Philip H. Trenary (President and CEO)
Website http://www.flypinnacle.com

Pinnacle Airlines (NASDAQPNCL)(formerly Express Airlines I) is an American regional airline based in Memphis, Tennessee,[1] operating Delta Connection for Delta Air Lines. Its main base is Memphis International Airport, with hubs at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport and Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

The airline was established in February 1985 as Express Airlines I with the intent of offering regional airline passenger feed to a code sharing, major airline’s hub.[3] Express I began its first code sharing agreement with Republic Airlines in May 1985.[4] Republic was the dominant carrier in Memphis, but in keeping with the Hub-and-Spoke concept wanted to add more smaller cities and free up its larger DC-9 jets to serve longer stage-length routes. Express I was able to accomplish this by beginning service on June 1, 1985 to 3 cities using BAe Jetstream 31 aircraft. Within six months, Express Airlines I was operating in ten markets with nine Jetstream 31s and two Saab 340 aircraft.

On December 15, 1985, a second contract opened operations at a Republic Airlines home base at Minneapolis-St. Paul. By its first anniversary, Republic Express was operating 20 Jetstream 31s and seven Saab 340s in 32 markets. In Spring 1986, Northwest Airlines announced its intent to acquire Republic Airlines. Following regulatory approval and ratification by the shareholders of the respective companies, Republic was absorbed into Northwest effective October 1, 1986.

Over the next decade, Express I provided airline services to 56 cities in the Southeast and upper Mid-West. In 1997, Northwest Airlines elected to make changes in the structure of Express I, which, until then, had been privately held. Effective from April 1, 1997, Express I became a wholly-owned subsidiary of Northwest Airlines. In order to consolidate the many Airlink systems operated at that time, Express I transferred flying at Minneapolis-St. Paul, allowing it to concentrate on the Memphis Hub.

In August 1997, Express I moved its corporate headquarters to Memphis, allowing all the various departments to function from its main base of operations. On May 7, 1999, Express I announced a major transition into the jet age as its parent company announced that Express would be the launch operator of the Bombardier Canadair Regional Jet (CRJ) at Northwest. This award was for a minimum of 42 CRJs designated to operate as Northwest Jet Airlink. Delivery of the CRJs began in April 2000 and the first Northwest CRJ lifted into the sky on June 1, 2000 bound for Greenville – Spartanburg, SC.

Express I further expanded by the development of three additional Maintenance, Repair, Overhaul (MRO) facilities related to CRJ operations. The first, located in Knoxville, Tennessee, is a permanent base. It is capable of handling up to four aircraft under cover. The Knoxville facility will serve as the primary CRJ Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul facility. Other CRJ maintenance sites are located at South Bend and Fort Wayne, Indiana.

Express Airlines I changed its name to Pinnacle Airlines, Inc. on May 8, 2002. Pinnacle's call sign is "Flagship", due to an Arkansas charter company that has already claimed the call sign "Pinnacle". The flagship radio call sign was used from almost the beginning of the airline in 1985. For a couple of weeks the carrier used jetstream and the tail number. The use of "flagship" came because several of the original people, in particular the VP of Flight Operations and Director of Training, came from the then defunct Dolphin Airlines in Florida, which had used the call sign prior to their demise. In November, 2003, Pinnacle Airlines became a publicly traded company, using the symbol PNCL on the NASDAQ. Pinnacle has been contracted to fly 124 CRJ's on behalf of Northwest Airlines. On July 18, 2004, the 1st CRJ was christened the 'Spirit of Memphis Belle,' in honor of a WWII bomber that was paid for with funds raised by the African-American community in Memphis. The 100th CRJ was christened "Spirit of Beale Street" to honor Pinnacle's home town.

On January 18, 2007, Pinnacle Airlines Corp. announced the acquisition of Colgan Air, which will continue to operate independently.[5] The acquisition of Colgan Air is a $20 million strategic move to get access to Colgan’s partners, Continental Airlines, United Airlines and US Airways[6].

The airline has 3,436 employees (at March 2007).[2]

On January 4, 2008, Pinnacle took the last step in becoming independent again with the purchase of its Class A Preferred stock from Northwest Airlines.[7]

Pinnacle Airlines is currently in the process of painting all of its CRJ-200 fleet from Northwest Airlink to Delta Connection. 2 aircraft are being painted per 8-10 days and the project should take about 16 months.

[edit] Future

Northwest agreed with Pinnacle on a new Air Service Agreement on December 21, 2006. The details of this ASA include a contract to have Pinnacle fly 124 CRJ's until 2017. Northwest has also put a clause in the contract allowing the CRJ-200 aircraft to be converted to 76 seat aircraft.

Part of the new ASA included a clause that if Pinnacle management and ALPA do not agree on a new pilot contract by March 31, 2007, then Northwest can remove up to 17 CRJs from Pinnacle's fleet. Since this deadline passed with no new pilot contract, Northwest is exercising their right to remove 17 CRJs from Pinnacle, starting in September at a rate of two CRJs per month. These 17 CRJs were removed from Pinnacle and handed over to Mesaba Airlines in 2008.

Northwest has also allowed Pinnacle to seek flying from other carriers and this began in January 2008 when Pinnacle's new subsidiary Colgan Air started flying out of Newark Liberty International Airport under the "Continental Connection" banner. Colgan already flies as Continental Connection out of Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport using 34-passenger Saab 340 turboprops and flies to cities in Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas. Under this new agreement, Colgan will operate 74-passenger Bombardier Q400 turboprops from Newark. Continental will announce destinations at a later date. One confirmed destination will be Pearson Airport in Toronto, Canada. This is to compete with Canadian carrier Porter Airlines which flies to Newark from Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport. Both carriers use the same aircraft, a Bombardier Q-400.

On April 30, 2007, Pinnacle Airlines Corp. signed a 10 year contract with Delta Air Lines to be a Delta Connection carrier. The 16 Bombardier CRJ 900's began delivery in November 2007 and the deliveries are scheduled to be complete by May 2009. The first batch of delivered aircraft are based in Atlanta and began service in December 2007. As of July 2008, Pinnacle has 11 CRJ-900 operating for Delta Air Lines. On June 10, 2008 Pinnacle announced that Delta planned to withdraw from the contract by July 31, 2008 for failure to make its timetable. However, on July 18, 2008 Delta announced that an agreement had been reached that would allow Pinnacle to continue flying for Delta under the terms of the initial contract. The remaining 4 CRJ-900s will be delivered between January and May 2009, at which point all 15 CRJ-900s will be in service for Delta Connection.[8]

Pinnacle Airlines Corp. will move Colgan Air headquarters from Manassas, VA to the corporate headquarters in Memphis, TN by the end of November 2009.

[edit] Destinations

Pinnacle flies out of four hubs, Detroit MI, Memphis TN, and Minneapolis-St. Paul MN for Northwest Airlines and Atlanta for Delta Air Lines. Pinnacle currently serves over 110 cities in 39 states and Canadian provinces. It operates well over 800 flights a day.[9] See Northwest Airlink destinations.

[edit] Fleet

The Pinnacle Airlines fleet includes the following aircraft as of October 2009:[10]

A Pinnacle Airlines CRJ 200
Aircraft Total Passengers
(First/Economy)
Notes
Bombardier CRJ-200LR 125 50 (-/50) operated for Delta Connection
Bombardier CRJ-900 16
76 (12/64) operated for Delta Connection

[edit] Incidents and accidents

  • Flight 3701 was a Bombardier CRJ200 with a crew of two operating a ferry flight (with no passengers) from Little Rock, Arkansas to Minneapolis, Minnesota. It crashed on October 14, 2004 in a residential area in Jefferson City, Missouri due to the flight crew pushing the plane past its capabilities and ignoring warnings. Both pilots were killed. The NTSB has since finished its investigation of the accident.[11]
  • Flight 4712 was a Bombardier CRJ200LR from Traverse City, Michigan "which overran the runway while landing at Cherry Capital Airport (TVC), Traverse City, Michigan, during a snowstorm on April 12, 2007. The aircraft received substantial damage, but the 52 people onboard were not injured. The Board determined that the probable cause of this accident was the pilots’ decision to land at TVC without performing a landing distance assessment, which was required by company policy. This poor decision-making likely reflected the effects of fatigue produced by a long, demanding duty day, and, for the captain, the duties associated with check airman functions. Contributing to the accident were 1)the Federal Aviation Administration pilot flight and duty time regulations that permitted the pilots’ long, demanding duty day and 2)the TVC operations supervisor’s use of ambiguous and unspecific radio phraseology in providing runway braking information. Four safety recommendations were issued to the FAA addressing timely post accident drug testing, training on landing distance assessment performance, ground operations personnel communications, and criteria for runway closures in snow and ice conditions. The NTSB adopted the report on June 10, 2008."[12]

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