Alaska Airlines will pull out of Dallas Love Field. The carrier's last flight from the Dallas area's second largest airport will be on May 14. After that, Alaska operations in the Dallas metropolitan area will be consolidated at Dallas-Fort Worth Airport,
Airlines are seeking to undo Biden administration rules that required enhanced training for workers and protection for disabled passengers’ wheelchairs and assistive devices.
As another large winter storm dumps snow across the middle of the country this week, airlines are allowing some travelers to rebook their flights without incurring a change fee. The “big four” U.S. airlines are issuing travel waivers,
American Airlines, Delta, JetBlue, Southwest, and United—have joined an airline trade association lawsuit to overturn a Department of Transportation rule that forces airlines to treat wheelchair users and their mobility devices with dignity.
Airlines argue that stricter penalties for damaged mobility devices are excessive, while the DOT maintains they are necessary to ensure dignity and accessibility for travelers with disabilities.
Several major U.S. airlines are challenging a new federal rule aimed at improving travel for those with disabilities.
Trade group for American, Delta, JetBlue, Southwest and United say carriers are mishandling fewer passenger wheelchairs.
The DOT's Biden-era rule protecting travelers with mobility devices is being brought to court by major U.S. airlines.
Major U.S. airlines and a trade association have challenged a Biden administration rule issued in December requiring new consumer protections for disabled passengers using wheelchairs.
The case is filed against the U.S. Department of Transportation, and right now, it's unclear whether the Trump administration will defend it.
There's a growing volume of online chatter about the next big airline merger that's likely to be proposed, and much of it involves Southwest Airlines.
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Hosted on MSNSouthwest Airlines cuts almost a fifth of its workforce in company's first mass layoffsSouthwest Airlines plans to cut 1,750 jobs or 15 percent of its corporate workforce, in the US carrier's first company-wide layoffs in its 54-year history. The Dallas-based airline said Monday that the job cuts would be focused almost entirely on “corporate overhead and leadership positions,
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