Puneet Varma (Editor)

USA3000 Airlines

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U5
  
GWY

Destinations
  
2 (at closure)

Website
  
www.usa3000.com

Founded
  
2002

GWY
  
GETAWAY

Parent company
  
Apple Vacations

Ceased operations
  
January 30, 2012

Fleet size
  
2 (at closure)

USA3000 Airlines httpsworldairlinenewsfileswordpresscom2012

Key people
  
John J. Mullen, (Former: President, Chairman and CEO)

Headquarters
  
Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, United States

Landing at ord usa3000 airlines


Brendan Airways, LLC, doing business as USA3000 Airlines, was a U.S. airline, headquartered in Newtown Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. It operated both scheduled and charter service with a fleet of five Airbus A320 aircraft. The airline's last flight departed on January 30, 2012.

Contents

Launch & Apple Vacation Charters: 2000-2002

USA 3000 Airlines began operations with one Airbus A320. The inaugural flight on December 28, 2001, flew from Philadelphia to Cancun. By early 2002, USA 3000 Airlines exclusively operated charter flights, from Philadelphia, Newark, Hartford and Columbus, with two aircraft. A third aircraft was added to the fleet in 2002 and based at Chicago O’Hare International Airport.

Expansion & Scheduled service: 2003-2007

In order for USA 3000 to generate additional revenue, the existing charter flights were also offered as scheduled, allowing passengers to book flights without purchasing an Apple Vacation package.

In 2003, additional scheduled service was launched from northeastern U.S. cities to Florida, Bermuda, and throughout the Caribbean. Scheduled domestic destinations eventually included Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, St. Petersburg/Clearwater, Orlando, Melbourne, Florida, and Sarasota. Northern cities or "Gateway cities" included Newark, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Detroit, Chicago (O'Hare), and St. Louis. Additionally, USA 3000 offered seasonal service from Hartford, Boston, and Milwaukee.

By late 2004, USA 3000 Airlines operated 12 permanent A320 aircraft, plus 2 additional seasonal aircraft leased from Thomas Cook Airlines.

Cutbacks & Military Charters: 2008-2012

In early 2008, it was announced that USA 3000 Airlines would be pulling out of Newark Liberty Airport due to increased competition from discount carriers.

By Summer 2008, USA3000 Airlines began a major reduction of its Florida service, closing all stations except Fort Myers. USA3000 has cited record-high fuel prices as reason for the service cuts. According to former USA 3000 COO Angus Kinnear, "Florida has some of the lowest domestic air fares in the country and only Fort Myers fetches ticket prices high enough to make money with oil at $125 a barrel." In the same announcement, the airline confirmed the continuation of its remaining scheduled service, with a strong focus on maintaining the more profitable international routes. However seasonal service was restored in late 2008 to St. Petersburg/Clearwater Airport from Chicago (O'Hare) due to a decrease in oil prices, reduction in flights by competitors, and a demonstration of customer support.

In November 2008, Steven Harfst was named CEO.

In January 2009, USA 3000 submitted a Statement of Intent to the United States Transportation Command (USTRANSCOM) based at Scott Air Force Base to be certified into the country’s Civil Reserve Air Fleet (CRAF). USA 3000 became a certified CRAF air carrier, and was able to bid on the military’s domestic and short-range international charters. USA 3000 also sought “Ad Hoc” charter opportunities to improve aircraft utilization and enhanced their website to improve sales, customer service, and ancillary revenue opportunities.

USA 3000 ended all of its services from Detroit and Milwaukee in April 2009. citing poor demand and the economic downturn. USA 3000 also ended service from Baltimore and Pittsburgh later that summer for the same reasons. However, those services were later offered seasonally.

The Fort Myers crew base closed in March 2010. However, flight schedules from Southwest Florida International Airport were not impacted, according to the USA 3000 CEO.

In 2011, USA 3000 operated a fleet of 5 Airbus A320 aircraft.

In November 2011, Apple Vacations decided to dissolve USA 3000 Airlines. Apple Vacations subsequently uses other carriers such as Frontier Airlines, Sun Country Airlines, AirTran Airways, Alaska Airlines and AeroMexico to transport its customers to the Caribbean and Central America.

The airline's last scheduled flight arrived on January 30, 2012. The airline intended to serve all existing charters through September 2012.

Destinations

The last destinations USA3000 Airlines operated to were, Cancún and St. Louis.

Destinations terminated prior to closure:

  • Aruba- Oranjestad
  • Bahamas- Nassau
  • Bermuda- Bermuda
  • Costa Rica- Liberia
  • Dominican Republic- La Romana, Puerto Plata, Punta Cana, Santo Domingo
  • Jamaica- Montego Bay
  • Mexico- Acapulco, Cozumel, Huatulco, Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo, Puerto Vallarta, San Jose del Cabo
  • St. Lucia- Vieux Fort
  • United States– Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Buffalo, Charlotte, Chicago (O'Hare), Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus (OH), Detroit, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, Hartford, Lansing, Melbourne (FL), Milwaukee, New York City (JFK), Newark, Orlando, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Richmond, Sarasota, St. Petersburg/Clearwater, Washington D.C. (Dulles)
  • Fleet

    At the time of closure USA3000 Airlines had 2 aircraft in its fleet consisting of 2 Airbus A320-200s.

  • As of February 2011, USA3000's average fleet age was 8.7 years old.
  • USA3000 Airlines flew a fleet composed solely of Airbus A320 jet aircraft that were configured with 168 seats in a single-class configuration.
  • Most planes were new, delivered from Airbus.
  • References

    USA3000 Airlines Wikipedia