American to charge for 1st checked
bag, cut flights
FORT
WORTH, Texas (AP) —
American Airlines will start charging $15 for the first checked bag, cut
domestic flights and lay off possibly thousands of workers as it grapples with
record-high fuel prices.
Rival
Delta has no current plans to match American’s fee for the first checked bag, a
spokeswoman said.
American,
the nation’s largest carrier, said May 21 the fee for the first checked bag
starts June 15 and that it would raise other fees for services ranging from reservation
help to oversized bags. The other fees will mostly range from $5 to $50 per
service, the airline said.
Last
month American announced it would join other carriers in charging $25 for
second bags checked for some passengers, but it wasn’t immediately clear how
the May 21 announcement would affect that.
Its
proposed fee for a first checked bag would exempt people who belong to elite
levels of its frequent flyer programs, those who bought full-fare tickets and
those traveling overseas.
Delta
Air Lines Inc. spokeswoman Betsy Talton said the
Atlanta-based airline is considering all of its options in light of
$130-a-barrel oil, but has no plans “at this time” to match the $15 fee
American announced.
Chairman
and Chief Executive Gerard J. Arpey said he expects
the new or raised fees will raise several hundred million dollars, but that was
the best estimate he would give.
The
changes were being made to adapt to “the current reality of slow economic
growth and high oil prices,” Arpey said. He said the
fees are an effort to get customers to pay for services they want.
Arpey didn’t put a figure on the layoffs,
but when asked whether he expected the figure to be in the thousands he said
yes.
American
plans to cut domestic flight capacity by 11 percent to 12 percent in the fourth
quarter. American had previously expected fourth-quarter capacity to fall 4.6
percent from the same period in 2007.
Parent
AMR Corp. said reduced flying will lead to an undisclosed number of job cuts at
both American and its American Eagle subsidiary.
AMR
expects to retire 45 to 50 planes from its fleet, most of them gas-guzzling
MD-80 aircraft.
Those
were the plane grounded for faulty wiring last month.
American
said rising oil prices have increased its expected annual fuel costs by nearly
$3 billion since the start of the year.
AMR
shares tumbled $1.42, or 17.2 percent, to $6.78 after the announcement which
came as its shareholders gathered for their annual meeting.
They
sank to a 52-week low of $6.72 earlier in the session.