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Continental Airlines

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Continental Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
CO COA CONTINENTAL
Founded1934
(as Varney Speed Lines)[1]
Commenced operationsJuly 15, 1934[1]
Hubs
Frequent-flyer programOnePass
AllianceSkyTeam
Star Alliance (future)[2]
SubsidiariesContinental Micronesia
Fleet size359 (+96 orders)
Destinations283[3]
HeadquartersHouston, Texas, United States
Key peopleLawrence W. Kellner (Chairman and CEO)
Jeffery A. Smisek (President and COO)
Zane Rowe (CFO)
Websitehttp://www.continental.com

Continental Airlines, Inc. (IATA: COICAO: COAcall sign: CONTINENTAL) (NYSECAL) is a United States certificated air carrier. Based in Houston, Texas, it is the fourth-largest airline in the US based on revenue passenger miles.[4] Since 1998, Continental's marketing slogan has been "Work Hard, Fly Right."

Continental operates flights to destinations throughout the U.S., Canada, Latin America, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific regions. It has more than 6,000 daily departures, serving over 151 domestic and 190 international destinations and has 85,200 employees (as of March 2007).[5] Principal operations are from its three hubs at Newark Liberty International Airport (in Newark, New Jersey), George Bush Intercontinental Airport (in Houston, Texas), and Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (in Cleveland, Ohio). Continental Micronesia, a wholly owned subsidiary, operates routes around Micronesia from its hub at Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport on Guam and connects the Micronesian region with destinations in East Asia, Southeast Asia, Honolulu and Cairns, Australia.

Continental Airlines is a minority owner of ExpressJet Airlines, which operates under the trade name Continental Express but is a separately managed and publicly-traded company. Cape Air, Colgan Air, CommutAir, and Gulfstream International Airlines feed Continental's flights under the Continental Connection identity, as does Chautauqua Airlines under the Continental Express identity, although Continental does not have any ownership interests in these companies.

Since September 2005, Continental has been a member of the SkyTeam Alliance, in which it participates with Northwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Air France, Aeromexico, Alitalia and KLM; In addition to extensive code share arrangements with SkyTeam partner airlines, the airline also code-shares with Amtrak rail services to some cities in the northeastern United States, with US Helicopter which fly from Newark Liberty International Airport to Manhattan, and with SNCF French Rail to destinations in France. In January 2009, Continental announced that it will leave SkyTeam and join Star Alliance at an unspecified date.

History

Early history: 1931-1958

File:Co.table.aug37.jpg
Continental timetable, August 1937.
File:VarneyOrion.jpg
Varney Speed Lines Lockheed L-9 Orion in Burbank, California.
File:4574 1950 CALstew DC3.jpg
Continental stewardess and passenger, Mother's Day, 1950
File:4322 old.CAL.logo.jpg
Continental Airlines logo, ca. 1944-1967
File:6835 CAL Convair340.jpg
A Convair 340 passenger boarding, 1954

Continental Airlines began service in 1931 as Varney Speed Lines (named after one of its initial owners, Walter T. Varney, who was also a founder of United Airlines) operating out of El Paso and extending through Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and Las Vegas, NM to Pueblo, CO. The airline commenced operations with the Lockheed Vega, a single engine plane that carried four passengers. The airline later flew other Lockheed planes, including the Lockheed L-9 Orion, the Lockheed Electra Junior, and the Lockheed Lodestar.

Following cancellation of all domestic airmail contracts by the Roosevelt administration in 1934, Robert Six learned of an opportunity to buy into the Southwest Division of Varney Speed Lines, which needed money to handle its newly-won Pueblo-El Paso route. Six was introduced to Louis Mueller (who would serve as Chairman of the Board of Continental until February 28th, 1966). Mueller had helped found the Southwest Division of Varney in 1934 with Walter T. Varney. As an upshot of all this, Six bought into the airline with $90,000 and became general manager on July 5th, 1936. Varney was awarded a 17-cent-rate airmail contract between Pueblo and El Paso; it carried passengers as a sideline. The carrier was renamed Continental on July 8, 1937. Six relocated the airline's headquarters to Denver Union (later Stapleton) Airport in Denver in October, 1937.[6]

Robert F. Six was one of the colorful group of innovators, pioneers, and visionaries (including Juan Trippe, William A. Patterson, Jack Frye, C.R. Smith, and Eddie Rickenbacker) who established and built the U.S. airline industry. Throughout his life, Six had a reputation as a combative and risk-taking executive who presided forcefully over the airline that was largely forged in his image for more than 40 years.[6][7]

During World War II Continental's Denver maintenance facilities became a conversion center where the airline converted B-17s, B-29s and P-51s for the United States Army Air Force. Profits from military transportation and aircraft conversion enabled Continental to contemplate expansion and acquisition of new aircraft types which became available following the war.[6]

Among those types were the DC-3, the Convair 240 and the Convair 340. Some of the DC-3's were acquired as surplus military aircraft following WW-II. The Convairs were the first aircraft operated by Continental that were pressurized (see photo).

The airline's early route network was limited to the original El Paso to Denver route, with added routes accross Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. By 1946 Continental had added new routes from Denver to Kansas City and to Tulsa/Oklahoma City, and from El Paso and Albuquerque to San Antonio, all routes with intermediate stops in several of eighteen smaller cities. In 1953 Continental achieved its first major expansion by merging with Pioneer Airlines, gaining access to 16 additional cities in Texas and New Mexico. These Pioneer destinations integrated well with the Continental's post-World War II routes, and provided impetus for the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), the industry regulator, to subsequently award additional routes between points in Colorado, Texas, New Mexico, Kansas and Oklahoma. However, Continental was, like most U.S. carriers of the day, essentially a limited regional operation. Bob Six was highly dissatisfied with this situation. He vigorously petitioned the CAB for longer haul routes to larger cities, a part of his plan to transform the regional into a trunkline like United, TWA, and American. Simultaneously, he was quietly discussing with Boeing for Continental to become one of the first among the world's airlines to operate the soon-to-be-launched 707 jet aircraft. The timing was crucial, since the new routes would justify the 707s, and vice versa.[6]

The "Airline that needed to grow," 1959-1969

Robert F. Six, in 1969.

By the end of the 1950s, Six's strategy had succeeded. Continental Airlines had seen a broad expansion of its routes, thanks to a responsive CAB and persistent efforts by Six, who frequently referred to his company as, "the Airline that needs to grow."[6] In 1957 it flew for the first time from Chicago to Los Angeles (both nonstop, and via Denver); and from Denver to Kansas City. Continental Airlines introduced turboprop service with the Vickers Viscount, on the new medium haul routes. Prior to the introduction of its Boeing 707 jets, Continental acquired DC-7s to operate its non-stop route from Los Angeles to Chicago, as well as Denver-Los Angeles and Chicago-Kansas City (see photos).

During the late 1950s and early 1960s, Six clearly established himself as the airline industry's leading lower-fare advocate. He correctly prophesied that increased traffic, not higher rates, was the answer to the airline industry's problems. Six stunned the industry when he introduced the economy fare on the Chicago-Los Angeles route in 1962. He later pioneered a number of other low or discount fares which brought air travel to many who otherwise could not have afforded it. One of Continental's early innovations was a system-wide economy excursion fare which cut the standard coach fares by more than 25 percent. [6]

File:1254 CAL DC7B.jpg
A Douglas DC-7 in flight, 1958
A Continental B-707 taxis past LAX theme building, c. 1967

As Six had planned, Continental was one of the earliest operators of the Boeing 707, taking delivery of its first of four 707s in spring of 1959. Although Pan Am and TWA inaugurated 707 service a few weeks before Continental did, Continental was the first airline in the world to widely use the Boeing 707 in domestic service, first utilizing the type on the Chicago-Los Angeles nonstop route on June 8, 1959. However, because Continental's 707 fleet was small relative to other carriers, it required radical innovations to the 707 maintenance program. To maintain its small jet fleet Continental developed an industry first: the innovative "progressive maintenance" program enabled Continental to fly its 707 fleet seven days a week, 16 hours a day, achieving greater aircraft utilization than any other jet aircraft operator in the airline industry.[6]

Six, not being satisfied with 707 service alone, introduced exclusive innovations and luxe cuisine with Continental's 707 operations which were described as, "...nothing short of luxurious" by the Los Angeles Times, and, "...clearly, the finest in the airline industry" by the Chicago Tribune.[7]

Beginning in the early 1960s Continental added routes from Los Angeles to Houston, both nonstop and with 1- and 2-stop services to Houston via Phoenix, Tucson, El Paso, Midland-Odessa, Austin, and San Antonio. New service was also inaugurated from Denver to Seattle, Portland, New Orleans, and Houston (to Houston: both nonstop, and with 1- and 2-stop services via Wichita/Tulsa/Oklahoma City). In 1963 the company's headquarters were moved from Denver to Los Angeles.[6]

File:73421 CAL B727-200.jpg
Continental Airlines Boeing 727, Denver, 1972
File:69406 CO.DC9 proctor.johnproctor.jpg
Continental Airlines DC9-30, Tucson Intl. Airport, 1968
File:653356-Stapleton 1969.jpg
Stapleton International Airport, Denver, 1969, prior to major expansion which doubled facility size. Continental leased Concourse C, on right.

During the late 1960s, the company disposed of the last of its turboprop and piston powered aircraft--one of the first U.S. airlines to do so. Continental replaced the Viscount fleet with DC-9s from Douglas Aircraft and began an aggressive acquisition of Boeing 727 aircraft. These two types (DC-9 and B-727) were to become the workhorses of the Continental fleet from the late 1960s, and for the next twenty years. In 1968 a new systemwide Continental Airlines livery was launched, the orange and gold cheatlines adorned with a black "jetstream" logo (by Six's friend, the noted graphic designer Saul Bass) on the jets' tails (logo was later altered to red; see photo of 747). The marketing slogans adopted in 1968 and employed for about a decade were, "The Airline That Pride Built" and, "The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.".[7][6]

Throughout the Vietnam War Continental provided extensive cargo and troop transportation for United States Army and Marine Corps forces to Asian and the Pacific bases. Continental's 707s were the most common non-military aircraft transiting Saigon Tan Son Nhat airport.[7] As a result of Continental's experience in Pacific operations, the carrier formed subsidiary Air Micronesia in May 1968, inaugurating island hopping routes between Yap/Saipan/Guam, Majuro, Rota, Truk, Ponape (Pohnpei) and Honolulu.[6] "Air Mike", as it was known, initially operated with Boeing 727-100 aircraft specially outfitted with open-ocean survival gear and doppler radar. Air Micronesia now operates as subsidiary Continental Micronesia.

September 1969 saw the realization of a long-cherished goal: introduction of Continental service from Los Angeles to Honolulu/Hilo; and in 1970, Continental was awarded routes from the Seattle and Portland to San Jose, Hollywood-Burbank Airport, and Ontario, California--all rapidly growing airline markets. Nonstop San Francisco to Albuquerque and Dallas services were added in the same year .[6]

First African-American pilot

In 1963, Continental hired the first African-American pilot to work for any major carrier in the United States, Marlon D. Green, after a United States Supreme Court decision allowed a Colorado anti-discrimination law to be applied to his case against Continental.[8] Green flew with Continental from 1965 to until his retirement in 1978. Continental's hiring of Marlon Green paved the way for the hiring of minority pilots by all U.S. carriers, an industry milestone which was finally realized in 1977 after Southern Airways and Piedmont hired their first minority pilots.

Continental introduces the widebody era: 1970-1976

File:8131 CAL B747 DEN.jpg
Continental Airlines Boeing 747, Denver, 1978
File:CAL B747 lounge2.cal.jpg
Polynesian Pub, 1972
File:7845 CAL FAs c1972.jpg
Flight attendant uniforms, 1972

At Six's insistence, Continental (with Pan Am and Trans World Airlines) was a launch airline for the Boeing 747 aircraft. On June 26, 1970 Continental was the first carrier to introduce the 747 into U.S. domestic service.[7] Its upper-deck first class lounge and main deck "Polynesian Pub" won awards worldwide for the most refined cabin interior among all airlines, as did meal services developed by Continental's Cordon Bleu-trained executive chef, Lucien DeKeyser.[7] Continental's 747 services from Chicago and Denver to Los Angeles and Honolulu set the standard for service in the western U.S. When asked by one Denver customer service agent in 1974 why he flew Continental wherever he could, Hollywood legend Henry Fonda remarked, "This operation is class; strictly class!"[7][6]

On June 1, 1972 Continental's widebody DC-10 service began. Six had again insisted that Continental place a large order for DC-10s with manufacturer McDonnell Douglas. This decision again proved prescient, since the publicity associated with Continental's splashy 747 service in the Chicago-Denver-Los Angeles-Honolulu backbone corridor had stimulated not only increased market share, but increased traffic for all carriers in the markets. Additionaly Denver, Houston and Seattle were experiencing very rapid growth. The DC-10s quickly assumed most of the duties of flying between Denver and Chicago, Los Angeles, Houston and Seattle (and between Houston-Los Angeles).[6]

During the 1970s, Denver continued to be the central hub of the Continental system. The 747s were focused on the Chicago-Los Angeles-Honolulu routes, with a single daily round trip through Denver. The DC-10 aircraft operated in large inter-city markets (usually from Los Angeles to Chicago, Denver, Houston and Honolulu; and from Denver to Chicago, Seattle and Houston). DC-9 and B-727 types predominated over the rest of the system, as well as supplementing frequencies in the DC-10 markets.[7] Next to Braniff, Continental operated fewer aircraft types (four: the B-747, DC-10, B-727-200, and DC9-30) during this period than any U.S. trunkline, affording substantial savings in parts, maintenance, and crew training costs.[7]

The DC-10 proved to be a timely addition to the Continental fleet, as it enabled the airline to capitalize on the burgeoning traffic growth in western U.S. markets. Continental saw market share grow annually in each DC-10 market through the 1970s, until market parity was achieved with United, the principal competitor on most of the DC-10 routes. The same service innovations introduced to the 747 fleet were initially implemented on the DC-10s, including the "Polynesian Pub"; although after the 1973 oil crisis-induced fuel price increases, higher seating capacity was needed to achieve profitable economics, and the DC-10 pubs would be removed.[7]

According to Six biographer Robert Serling, quality was the watchword in every detail of the Continental's operations in the 1960s and 70s.[6] In one anecdotal indication of Six's passion for premium customer service, every page of the airline's Customer Service Manual was inscribed with these words: "Nothing in this manual supersedes common sense." Bob Six relentlessly prowled the Continental system, as well as competitors' flights, to assure tight quality standards and to search for ideas that could be adopted to Continental's network.[7][6] In a continuing tribute to Six's passion for quality customer service--and in spite of a period of difficulties resulting in deterioration of service between 1982 and 1994--Continental now regularly garners more passenger-preference and travel industry professional awards for quality service than any other airline.[9]

Deregulation and expansion: 1977-1980

In 1974, after years of delays and legal proceedings, Continental inaugurated service between Houston and Miami, and on May 21st, 1976, Continental was authorized to operate between San Diego and Denver--both routes had been long-sought, and signalled a new era of rapid growth for Continental. President Carter and Civil Aeronautics Board chairman Alfred Kahn had been promoting deregulation of the airline industry (see Airline Deregulation Act), which would dissolve the CAB and for the first time in industry history allow U.S. carriers to determine without government supervision where they would fly, and how much they could charge for their services. In this context, 1977 was an historic year for Continental and the industry at large, as the CAB began to loosen its regulatory grip. Continental began service from Denver to Miami/Ft. Lauderdale and Tampa/St. Petersburg. In that same year, President Carter authorized Continental to begin daily round trips between Air Micronesia destination Saipan and Japan, and approved a route for Continental from Los Angeles to Australia via Honolulu, American Samoa, Fiji, New Zealand and Australia. The South Pacific service began May 1st, 1979.[7]

After the 1978 passage of the Airline Deregulation Act, Continental, embarked on an aggressive program of route expansion. October 1978 saw Continental begin flights from the New York area airports to Houston and Denver, and from Denver to Phoenix.[7] That same month, Continental inaugurated DC-10 service between Los Angeles and Taipei, via Honolulu and Guam. Service between Houston and Washington D.C. began in January 1979. In June 1979, Continental linked Denver with Washington D.C., Las Vegas, San Francisco and San Jose and also began Houston-Tampa service.[7] By the time of the Texas Air Corp. acquisition in 1981, Continental's post-deregulation growth had allowed it to penetrate every major U.S. airline market (and all of the regional markets) from the hubs in Denver and Houston; and the rapid expansion in the air was answered with large-scale facilities expansions at each of these airports. In Denver, Continental's very rapid growth provided the final impetus for the construction of the new Denver International Airport, which would be completed almost fifteen years later.[7]

During 1978, Continental explored the possibility of a merger with Western Airlines.[7] Western was also headquartered at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) and operated a fleet consisting predominantly of the same B-727 and DC-10 aircraft types as Continental. The route systems would have been complementary, with little overlap; because, although they both served the Western states, Continental had strength in Hawaii, southern-tier and the Great Plains states; Western's strengths were in the California intrastate market, Alaska, Mexico, and the intermountain West. Both airlines served the Pacific Northwest and Rocky Mountain states, but along different routes from Los Angeles, Denver, San Francisco, Seattle and Phoenix. This merger was not consummated, however, and industry changes were to take Continental down a very different path.[7]

Unlike some airlines (notably Braniff whose expansion was so rapid and unsustainable that the additional costs made investment recovery impossible, and the carrier was forced into bankruptcy and liquidation), Continental's rate of expansion following passage of the Airline Deregulation Act seems, in retrospect, to have been appropriate. The markets that were added were almost all profitable, and formed a strong financial base for the wrenching challenges which the company would face between 1982 and 1994.

Acquisition by Texas Air Corporation: 1981-82

Frank Lorenzo, Continental CEO, 1981-1990

In 1981 Texas Air Corporation, an airline holding company controlled by U.S. aviation entrepreneur and raider Frank Lorenzo, acquired Continental after a contentious battle with Continental's management who were determined to resist Lorenzo. Continental's labor unions also fiercely resisted, fearing what they termed as, "Lorenzo's deregulation tactics," which meant that he wanted to make Continental a non-union airline. During this struggle, Continental Airlines President, A. L. Feldman, committed suicide, on August 9, 1981, in his office.[10]

In the end, Texas Air Corp. prevailed. Frank Lorenzo became Continental's new Chairman and CEO. On October 31, 1982 Continental merged with Texas International (the merged carrier retained the Continental name, brand, and identity; the TI brand and identity disappeared), offering service to four continents (North and South America, Asia and Australia) with a fleet of 112 aircraft. The "new Continental" relocated its headquarters to Texas Air's base in Houston, Texas. The merger resulted in a large expansion of Continental's hub at Houston Intercontinental Airport and extensive new routes to Mexico and the south central U.S.[7][11]

Airline unions fought Lorenzo and Continental at every step. In the Federal courts, they unsuccessfully sued to stop the company's reorganization. They were successful in working to persuade Congress to pass a new bankruptcy law preventing bankrupt companies from terminating contracts as Continental had successfully done. The law was too late to affect Continental and the cost cutting and changes that had rescued it from liquidation.[7][11][12]

First bankruptcy and labor relations: 1983-84

File:Coa sign.jpg
Sign marking entrance the entrance to Continental Center I, Continental's headquarters in Downtown Houston.

Frank Lorenzo took Continental into Chapter 11 bankruptcy on September 23,1983, after unsuccessfully attempting to negotiate a lower pay rate with labor unions. Rebuilding the company began immediately. Following bankruptcy, Continental was freed of its contractual obligations and imposed a series of new labor agreement on its union workers, sharply reducing the airline's labor costs at the cost of employee morale.[13] This move made Continental vastly more competitive with the new airline startups then emerging and thriving in the southwestern U.S., but had notable negative impact on employee attitudes and loyalty. In financial terms, the decision to take bankruptcy worked, the end of 1984, Continental recorded a $50 million profit. On June 30, 1986 Continental emerged from the Chapter 11 bankruptcy.[11][12] Continental has the distinction of being the first U.S. airline to fly through bankruptcy.[11][12]

During this period, Continental was forced to abandon its small hub in Los Angeles although it maintained routes from LAX to Denver, Chicago, Houston, and the South Pacific.

European service and rapid growth by consolidation: 1985-89

On April 28, 1985, Continental began its rebound, as signaled by the inauguration of its first ever scheduled service to Europe with flights from Newark and Houston to London. Soon thereafter, services to Paris, Frankfurt, Madrid and Munich were added.

In October 1985, Texas Air Corp. made an offer for a Denver-based regional carrier, Frontier Airlines, opening a bidding war with People Express, which was headed by Lorenzo's former TI associate Don Burr. PeopleExpress paid a substantial premium for Frontier's high-cost operation. The acquisition, funded by debt, did not seem rational to industry observers from either the route integration or the operating philosophy points of view, but was in the opinion of most industry analysts rather an attempt by Burr to best his former boss, Frank Lorenzo.[7][12]

Boeing 757-200 with winglets departs for Newark

On August 24, 1986, Frontier filed for bankruptcy and ceased operations. With People Express hemorrhaging cash, Texas Air acquired PeopleExpress on September 15, 1986, at the same time gaining Frontier whose strong network in the Great Plains and intermountain West reinforced Continental's already formidable Denver hub. Because it had been the largest airline operating in the New York market, the PeopleExpress hub at Newark would permit Continental to expand its east coast services dramatically for the first time in its history. Continental soon became the third-largest airline in the U.S., and the predominant force in the New York, Denver and Houston airline markets. Continental emerged from bankruptcy in 1986 with improved asset and cash flow positions and a more competitive route structure with routes radiating to every large U.S. city from major hubs at Denver and Houston.[12][7]

On February 1, 1987, People Express, Frontier, New York Air, and several commuter carriers were merged into Continental Airlines to create the third-largest U.S. airline (and sixth largest airline in the world). In so doing, Continental became an even larger player in the northeastern markets. 1987 saw the creation of Continental's OnePass frequent flier program (jointly with Eastern Airlines); and, in 1988 Continental formed its first strategic partnership (and the first international airline alliance of its kind) with SAS.[7]

Second bankruptcy, new leadership and structural changes: 1990-97

In 1990, Frank Lorenzo retired after 18 years at the helm of Texas International and later Texas Air and Continental Airlines, selling the majority of his Jet Capital Corporation to Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS). According to William F. Buckley, in his September 17, 1990 article on National Review, the sale to SAS was conditioned on Lorenzo leaving the company.

On December 3, 1990, Continental filed for its second bankruptcy in a decade. There were a number of circumstances behind the second bankruptcy, most importantly: Lorenzo had dedicated himself almost full time to Eastern Air Lines acquisition and labor relations issues; the 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and the resultant Gulf War had prompted a dramatic increase in the price of jet fuel; and People Express had also been highly leveraged at the time of its merger with Continental, having purchased Frontier Airlines just two years before. In addition to Lorenzo embarking on deals which saddled the airline with other carriers' debts, he also began consolidating the different airlines into one system. That resulted in a fleet comprising numerous aircraft types, evident in the patchwork array of liveries in the Continental fleet for years to come.

In the late 1980s, following a dramatic reduction of service by United Airlines and an unsuccessful attempt by USAir to establish point-to-point service, Continental expanded at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport and established what would become its third-largest system hub. Continental quickly gained nearly all of the gates in the airport's C concourse (once dominated by United), and later expanded that concourse in addition to constructing a new Concourse D.

On February 12, 1991, Continental unveiled its new blue and grey livery and the "globe" logo. These continue to be the identity for Continental's fleet and facilities identification.

In 1993 Air Canada, along with Air Partners and Texas Pacific Group, enabled Continental to emerge from bankruptcy by investing $450 million in the airline. Under the leadership of former Boeing executive Gordon Bethune, who became President in October 1994, Continental began a substantial work of re-invention. Bethune began by ordering new aircraft in an effort to convert to an all-Boeing fleet. After the opening of Denver International Airport on February 28, 1995, Continental management decided that the Denver hub - its historic operational base and heart of the system for almost 60 years - would be abruptly reduced to spoke status (with service only to Houston, Newark, and Cleveland). This decision centered on cost-reductions, since DIA charges and landing fees were substantially higher than those at Stapleton, which DIA had replaced. Bethune also launched a 'Go-Forward Plan', designed to repair damanged morale and to fix other problems with the airline. His experiences are chronicled in his 1999 book From Worst to First. [14]

Recent and current operations

Boeing 777 "Peter Max" (the colorful aircraft) at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas. Downtown Houston is visible in the background. The livery was removed in the winter of 2007-2008.
File:Continental Headquarters.jpg
Continental Center I with the Continental logo featured on the roof's left facet.

Beginning in 1998, Continental again embarked on a program to expand its international operations. In that year it inaugurated services to Ireland and Scotland, and in October 1998 the airline received its first Boeing 777 aircraft, allowing non-stop flights from Newark and Houston to Tokyo, Japan, and from Newark to Tel Aviv, Israel. Continental in the same year launched partnerships with Northwest Airlines, Copa, Avant Airlines, Transbrasil, and Cape Air, and Continental and America West Airlines became the first two US airlines to launch interline electronic ticketing.

On March 1, 2001, Continental launched non-stop service from Newark to Hong Kong, operating over the North circumpolar route. This service was the first non-stop long-haul route for any airline with flying duration exceeding 16 hours. The SARS outbreak in Asia caused service to be suspended until August 1, 2003. The launch in 2001 initiated a brief battle between Continental, United Airlines and Cathay Pacific over rights to non-stop flights between Hong Kong and New York.

In 2005, Continental expanded service from Newark to Beijing after being awarded the China route. During the same year, five new European destinations were added: Stockholm in Sweden, Belfast and Bristol in the United Kingdom, and Hamburg and Berlin in Germany. Continental also began new non-stop service to Oslo, Norway in 2004, Cologne, Germany in 2006 and to Athens, Greece in 2007. Among U.S. airlines, only Delta serves more European destinations than Continental.

In 2005 service to Asia was expanded as Continental introduced daily nonstop service between Newark and New Delhi, India. The success of this Newark-New Delhi route presaged establishment of a second gateway in India with the announcement of daily nonstop service to Mumbai. Establishment of the Mumbai service signifies that Continental will offer the most nonstop flights by any carrier from the United States to India.

By May 2006, the carrier's passenger traffic surpassed that of Northwest Airlines, and Continental became the fourth-largest U.S. carrier, the first change in the top-five passenger enplanement rankings since 2001.

The Wall Street Journal reported on December 12, 2006 that Continental was in merger discussions with United Airlines. Of issue would be Continental's golden share held by Northwest Airlines, dating from a stakeholding relationship during the late 1990s, and the divestiture of Continental's Guamanian hub. A deal was not "certain or imminent", with the talks being of a preliminary nature.[15][16]

Recognizing operational capacity limits at Newark, Continental announced plans to further utilize its Cleveland hub by developing more international services at Cleveland. On September 14, 2007, Continental outlined a two-year expansion of its Cleveland hub, including new service from Cleveland to Paris commencing May 22, 2008. Additional international routes are expected to follow, pending the completion of a newly-expanded Federal Inspection Services station in Continental's primary concourse in Cleveland.

Domestically, the planned expansion would involve two phases. The first phase encompasses twelve destinations to be served from Cleveland primarily on regional jets, with the new service in place by May 2008. Later, in 2009, up to 20 new destinations were planned to be added, primarily on mainline aircraft. Continental stated that the expansion would be complete in time for the summer 2009 travel season, resulting in up to 700 new jobs at the Cleveland hub. However, the Economic crisis of 2008 has ended those plans and, in fact, resulted in a reduction of operations at the Cleveland hub.[17]

Continental is the dominant operator at Houston Intercontinental Airport
Continental, New York's dominant carrier, operates from Terminal C at Newark Liberty International Airport[18]

In May 2008, Continental Airlines sold its remaining 4.38 million share investment in Panamanian flag carrier Copa for $35.75 a share, netting proceeds of $149.8 million. Continental had been a principal shareholder in Copa.[19]

Continental said on June 5, 2008 that due to national and international economic conditions, it would cut 3,000 jobs and that the CEO and president would reduce their salaries for the remainder of the year. The airline also said it would reduce capacity and eliminate 67 mainline aircraft from its fleet by the end of 2009, retiring all of Continental's 737-300s and all but 35 of its 737-500s.

On June 19, 2008, Continental announced that it planned to withdraw from the SkyTeam Alliance and would join the Star Alliance in order to cooperate more extensively with United Airlines and other Star Alliance airlines. Continental notes that its SkyTeam affiliation would, however, be business-as-usual until further notice.[2] Continental had been in discussions with United Airlines earlier in 2008 which might have resulted in a merger of the two carriers, but Continental withdrew from these discussions stating that it intended to continue to operate as presently constituted.

On August 19, 2008 The USA Today reported that Continental would furlough between 140 to 180 pilots. The article also mentioned that more than 2,500 jobs have already been eliminated, mostly by voluntary early out programs. Continental said in June that it would reduce U.S. capacity by 11% after the end of the peak summer travel season. [20]

In September 2008, Continental announced that it would provide new nonstop seasonal service between Houston and Rio de Janeiro. The new nonstop flight is timed to provide roundtrip flight connections at Continental's Houston hub to more than 160 cities throughout the U.S., Canada, Central America, Europe, and Asia.

On January 29, 2009, Continental announced that its 4th quarter 2008 net loss widened to $266 million on costs for pilot retirement and reducing the value of its fuel hedges.[21]

Recent awards and recognition

  • No. 1 Most Admired Global Airline; FORTUNE magazine (2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008)[22]
  • No. 1 Most Admired U.S. Airline; FORTUNE magazine (2006)[23]
  • "Airline of the Year" by OAG (2004, 2005)[24]
  • Best Executive/Business Class; OAG Airline of the Year Awards (2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006)
  • Best Airline Based in North America; OAG Airline of the Year Awards (2004, 2005, and 2006)
  • Best Trans-Atlantic and Trans-Pacific Business Class among U.S. airlines; Condé Nast Traveler (1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006)
  • Best Airline for Travel in North America, Best Flight Attendants in the US, and Best Inflight Service in the US by reader survey in the UK's Business Traveller magazine (2006)
  • Continental was also named "World's Most Admired Airline." by Yahoo!
  • Award for Highest-Ranked Network Airline by J.D. Power and Associates (2007)[25]
  • Best Large Domestic Airline (Premium class)by Zagat (2008) [26]
  • Continental was named the Best Value for the Money (International) among all airlines. by Zagat (2008) [26]
  • Best Airline for North American Travel by Business Traveler Magazine (2008) [27]

Continental Destinations

A Boeing 757-224 landing at Bristol International Airport in England
File:COA-772.JPG
Boeing 777-200 at Cibao International Airport in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic
Continental Micronesia Boeing 737-800 at Fukuoka Airport, Japan

Continental, together with Continental Express and Continental Connection, offers more than 3,100 daily departures throughout the Americas, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. The summer 2008 schedule saw Continental serving 145 domestic and 138 international destinations with more than 550 additional points served via SkyTeam alliance partner airlines. [28]

Continental Airlines operates primarily a hub-and-spoke route network with North American hubs in Cleveland, Houston, and Newark, and a west Pacific hub in Guam. Most flights are operated from its hubs, with a few exceptions (most notably Seattle-Anchorage and Los Angeles-Honolulu). Some affiliated airlines using the Continental Connection name also operate flights not involving hubs, such as Gulfstream International Airlines, which operates intra-Florida and Florida-Bahamas services.

For almost 40 years, Continental operated a very large hub in Denver, Colorado, but took the decision to close that hub in 1995 immediately after the opening of Denver International Airport (D.I.A). D.I.A. represented a significantly higher-cost operation than the former Stapleton Airport, which D.I.A. had replaced. The abrupt nature of this change came as a shock to Denver, which was experiencing dramatic growth. The void left by Continental's departure allowed the establishment of the "new" Frontier Airlines (a startup, rather than successor to the original carrier of that name). Frontier has expanded quickly to fill the vacuum created by Continental's closing of its Denver hub.

For the first forty years of its existence, Continental was a domestic airline; however, especially since the incorporation of Texas International routes, it has served more Mexican destinations than any other U.S. carrier since the mid-1980s.

Continental first entered the transatlantic market in April, 1985, with the introduction of a Houston-London Gatwick service. Long prevented from serving London-Heathrow because of the provisions of the Bermuda II agreement, Continental has maintained its London services at London-Gatwick, where in 2007 as many as six flights a day were offered to Newark, Houston, and Cleveland.

In March 2008, an Open Skies Agreement between the U.S. and the European Union became effective, invalidating Bermuda II restrictions that had limited the number of carriers and cities in the U.S. that could serve London-Heathrow. In November 2007 Continental announced that new, nonstop, twice-daily service from its hubs at Houston-George Bush Intercontinental and Newark-Liberty to London-Heathrow would be offered; and this service was inaugurated on March 29, 2008. The service replaced existing frequencies to London-Gatwick and are offered with a combination of Boeing 777-200ER and 767-200 equipment.[29]

Continental operates domestic mainline flights from Lewis W. Cutrer Terminal C at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas.
Continental operates international flights from Terminal E at George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Houston, Texas.

During the Vietnam War, Continental's extensive military charter operations established a presence in the Pacific region that formed the basis for the Air Micronesia operation. Service to Japan was initiated in the 1970s from Guam and Saipan, and by the late 1980s, nonstop service between Seattle and Tokyo was briefly offered with 747 equipment, soon to be replaced with a direct Honolulu-Tokyo (Narita) flight. Through the 1990s, Continental maintained a minimal presence in the long-haul transpacific market, until the delivery of 777s in 1998 which saw the addition of nonstop Tokyo service from Houston and Newark. By 2007, Hong Kong and Beijing were added to the network, with Shanghai to follow in 2009, all from the Newark hub. Continental has served Australia in the past with Douglas DC-10[30] and Boeing 747 service from Hawaii; Continental withdrew from much of the Australian market, but continues Air Micronesia Boeing 737-800 services between Cairns and Guam.

Continental offers the most scheduled frequencies of any of the U.S. carrier to India, Japan, Mexico, and the United Kingdom, and is the only U.S. airline to fly to Norway, the Federated States of Micronesia, Indonesia, Marshall Islands, and Palau. Continental began service from Newark to Mumbai, India on October 1, 2007 making that city Continental's second Indian destination.

On September 24, 2007 the Department of Transportation tentatively awarded Continental permission to begin daily direct service between Newark and Shanghai, beginning in March 2009. The transpacific segment of the route is planned to be operated with a Boeing 777-200ER aircraft, while the flight will originate and terminate in Cleveland with a change of equipment at Newark.[31]

Continental is considering routes from its hub in Houston to Dubai, Rome, Milan, and Madrid which are planned to commence when it takes delivery of 787 aircraft in 2011. [32]

Continental announced on June 12, 2008 that it plans to end service to fifteen destinations as part of efforts to trim costs due to cost increases and reduced traffic.[33] The airline will close its gates and ticket counters in each of those airports.[33] Service the following cities will be discontinued completely: Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia; Cali, Colombia; Cologne, Germany; Guayaquil, Ecuador; Monclova, Mexico; Santiago, Dominican Republic; Oakland, California; Palm Springs, California; Reno, Nevada; Sarasota, Florida; Tallahassee, Florida; Green Bay, Wisconsin; Chattanooga, Tennessee; Toledo, Ohio and Montgomery, Alabama.[33][34]

As worldwide passenger traffic contracts as a result of economic conditions, service to other destinations may also be reduced or eliminated from Continental's hubs in Newark, Houston, Cleveland and Guam. Travelers at Houston and Cleveland are expected to be hardest hit by the planned service reductions.[33]

Fleet

Continental's all-Boeing fleet had an average age of 10.2 years as of April 2008. The fleet consists of four types (Boeing 737, 757, 767, and 777) in eleven variants, with two variants of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner scheduled to enter service in 2011. Continental has consistently been the most efficient trunkline operator of jets since they came on the aviation scene. The company's daily aircraft utilization is usually at the top of the industry.[7]

The Continental fleet consists of the following aircraft:[35]

Continental Airlines Fleet, December 2008
Aircraft Total Orders Passengers
(First*/Economy)
Routes Notes
Boeing 737-300 23 0 124 (12/112) Domestic short-medium haul
US, Mexico, Canada
Will be retired by end of 2009
Boeing 737-500 42 0 114 (8/106) Domestic short-medium haul 35 to remain in service
which will be retrofitted with winglets
Boeing 737-700 36 37 124 (12/112) Domestic and Caribbean short-medium haul All configured with winglets
Installing DirecTV[36]
Installing Wi-Fi service offered by LiveTV
Boeing 737-800 116 5 152 (20/132)
157 (16/141)
160 (16/144)
Domestic and Central America short-medium haul
Continental Micronesia
US, Mexico, Canada, Caribbean
All configured with winglets
Installing DirecTV[36]
Installing Wi-Fi service offered by LiveTV
Boeing 737-900 12 0 167 (18/149)
169 (20/149)
Domestic short-medium haul All configured with winglets
Will install 2 additional First Class seats
Installing DirecTV[36]
Installing Wi-Fi service offered by LiveTV
Boeing 737-900ER 17 20 173 (20/153) Domestic medium-long haul Installing DirecTV[36]
Installing Wi-Fi service offered by LiveTV
Boeing 757-200 41 0 175 (16/159) Domestic/international medium-long haul
and
Caribbean
Configured with BusinessFirst seats
All equiped with AVOD[37]
Boeing 757-300 17 4 used 216 (24/192) Domestic medium-long haul, Caribbean
Deliveries: 1 in 2009, 3 in 2010
Installing DirecTV[36]
Installing Wi-Fi service offered by LiveTV
Largest operator of the Boeing 757-300. Will be retrofitted with blended winglets.
Boeing 767-200ER 10 0 174 (25/149) International medium-long haul
Europe, South America
US Domestic (EWR-IAH)
Boeing 767-400ER 16 0 235 (35/200)
256 (20/236)
International medium-long haul
Continental Micronesia, Mainland Hawaii, Europe,
South America, Asia
One of only two operators of the Boeing 767-400ER
Boeing 777-200ER 20 8 283 (48/235)
285 (50/235)
International long haul Deliveries: 2010-2012
Two additional BusinessFirst seats and AVOD
being added to fleet through late 2009
Boeing 787-8 0 8 N/A International long haul Entry into service: 2011
Boeing 787-9 0 17 N/A International long haul Entry into service: 2013

*First Class is offered on Domestic Flights. BusinessFirst is offered on Transatlantic/Transpacific Flights.

Boeing 737 on the ramp at San Diego International Airport.

Continental Airlines was one of three carriers (with American Airlines and Delta Air Lines) to sign an exclusivity agreement with Boeing in the late 1990s. When Boeing acquired McDonnell Douglas, the European Union forced Boeing to void the contracts. Both parties have been adhering to the terms under a gentlemen's agreement.

Continental was one of the first major airlines to fly the Boeing 757 on transatlantic routes. There have been some instances of range limitations on west-bound transatlantic flights due to strong headwinds resulting in a fuel stop which does not appear on the timetable, but these stops are not common. The use of the 757 with its smaller seating capacity has allowed for "thin" routes (routes with less passenger traffic) to be economically viable. It has allowed non-stop service from smaller cities, such as Bristol, England and Hamburg, Germany to the New York gateway. Previously, customers originating at these and similar cities needed to connect at European gateways like London, Paris or Frankfurt in order to travel to New York.

The 1970 CAL fleet

Continental Air Lines fleet in March, 1970 [38]
Aircraft Total Orders Notes
Boeing 707-320 13 0
Boeing 720 8 0
Boeing 727 13 0
Boeing 747-100 0 4
Douglas DC-9-10F 19 0
Total 53 4

Cabin

File:CO Business First logo.png
Boeing 777-200 Economy Class
Boeing 767-400ER Economy Class
Boeing 737 Economy Class

Continental Airlines, along with all United States SkyTeam carriers, has a two-class layout, First/BusinessFirst and Economy Class, for aircraft in the mainline fleets.[39]

BusinessFirst

BusinessFirst is the equivalent of business class on Continental Airlines' international flights.[40] It is currently available on Boeing 757-200, 767-200, 767-400, and 777-200 aircraft. On Boeing 757-200, 767-200, and 767-400 aircraft, seats have 55 inches of pitch and 156 degrees of recline. Boeing 757-200s feature Audio-Video-On-Demand (AVOD), which is planned to be added on the Boeing 767 family aircraft in the future which currently have personal TVs. On Boeing 777-200 aircraft, seats have 55 inches of pitch and 170 degrees of recline. They also have personal TVs, but are gradually being upgraded to AVOD. Passengers aboard this class receive free meals and refreshments, including alcoholic beverages. All seats are equipped with lumbar support, a footrest, an adjustable headrest, and in-seat power. On Boeing 777-200 aircraft, seats are also equipped with a movable reading light and more storage for personal items.

Lie-flat seats will be rolled out on the carrier's Boeing 777-200 fleet starting in second half of 2009, followed by its Boeing 757-200s. All future new-build Boeing 777s and 787s entering Continental's fleet will also be delivered with the new seats. The new seat, designed by BE Aerospace, will offer universal power outlets, USB and iPod connectors, and large LCD screens (15.4" for 777 and 787, 10.4" for 757). In October 2008, Continental also announced that twelve of its sixteen Boeing 767-400ERs will be fitted with the new BusinessFirst seats sometime after 2009. There are presently no plans to add the new flat BusinessFirst seats to the four 767-400ERs currently based in Guam, nor does Continental plan to upgrade the BusinessFirst product on its ten Boeing 767-200ERs.

Domestic First Class

Domestic First Class is offered on domestic flights. It is available on all Boeing 737 family aircraft, as well as Boeing 757-300 aircraft. Seats range from 20.75 to 21 inches wide, and have between 37 and 38 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class receive free meals, refreshments, and alcoholic beverages. Passengers can watch movies on overhead TV screens located throughout the cabin. Beginning in 2009, Continental plans to add LiveTV television and Wi-Fi services to all next-generation Boeing 737s and Boeing 757-300s which will be free of charge to First Class customers.[36]

International Economy Class

Economy Class is available on all international flights. Seats range from 17.2 to 17.9 inches wide, and have between 31 and 32 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class receive free meals, snacks, and non-alcoholic refreshments; alcoholic beverages can be purchased for five United States dollars per drink or one Continental Currency coupon per drink.[41]

Boeing 757-200 aircraft include Audio-Video On-Demand (AVOD) in every seat back. Boeing 767 and 777 family aircraft are equipped with a personal television located in every seat back, using a tape system. All Boeing 777-200 aircraft are scheduled to have AVOD by the end of 2009. On all Boeing 757-200 and retrofitted AVOD Boeing 777-200 aircraft, all rows are equipped with power-ports (two power ports per group of 3 seats) that do not require special power adapters or cables.

Domestic Economy Class

Economy Class is available on all domestic flights. Seats are 17.2 inches wide, and have between 31 and 32 inches of pitch. Passengers aboard this class receive free meals, snacks, and non-alcoholic refreshments. Continental Airlines is one of the few US airlines that still serves meals at traditional meal times free of charge.[citation needed] Alcoholic beverages may be purchased for $5 or one coupon per drink. Passengers on select Boeing 737-300 and all Boeing 737-700, -800, -900, -900ER, and 757-300 aircraft can watch movies on overhead television screens located throughout the cabin and headsets for these are $1 each. Beginning in January 2009, Continental plans to add LiveTV television and Wi-Fi services to all next-generation Boeing 737s and Boeing 757-300s which will cost $6.00 to use for Economy Class customers. It will take 18 months to fully install this service aboard all 250+ aircraft that will receive the service.[36]

OnePass

Established in 1987, OnePass is the frequent flyer program for Continental Airlines, Copa Airlines and AeroRepública. OnePass offers regular travelers the privilege to obtain free tickets, First Class upgrades on flights, discounted membership for its airport lounge (President's Club), and other types of rewards. Customers accumulate miles from flight segments they fly or through Continental Airlines partners. OnePass elite tiers are Silver, Gold, and Platinum Elite which have benefits such as free upgrades, mileage bonus, priority check-in, priority boarding, and much more. Continental previously had a frequent flyer program prior to OnePass, which was started not long after American Airlines started its frequent flyer program in 1981 and when most large United States airlines followed, but this was merged with Eastern Airlines' frequent flyer program in 1987 to form OnePass.[42][43] The name "OnePass" refers to the ability to accumulate miles on two major airlines, namely Continental and Eastern, in one frequent flyer program.

In addition to its Continental Express, Continental Connection, and SkyTeam alliance partnerships, Continental has frequent flyer partnerships with the following airlines:

OnePass members may also earn miles through partner car rental companies and hotels. Because of their partnership with Amtrak, miles may also be earned on certain Amtrak trains as well.[44]

Presidents Club

File:CO Presidents Club logo.png

The Presidents Club is the membership airport lounge program of Continental Airlines, Copa Airlines and AeroRepublica. The clubs all have open bars, but have also started a premium bar service where higher end wines can be purchased by the glass. Continental was the first airline to offer free wi-fi in their lounge.[45] There are 26 clubs throughout the world and members have full reciprocal privileges at over 40 additional locations including lounges operated by selected SkyTeam partners including Delta Air Lines, Aeroméxico, Alitalia, and Northwest Airlines. Presidents club members also have access to Alaska Airlines lounges and Amtrak Acela clubs. The Presidents Club offers lifetime memberships, something that as of November 2008 costs non-elite OnePass members $5,500.[46] BusinessFirst customers flying an international itinerary as well as International Business Class customers are allowed access to the clubs. BusinessFirst customers may bring up to two guests and Presidents Club members may bring two guests or their immediate family (spouse and children under 21 years of age). American Express Platinum and Centurion card members are granted access to Presidents Clubs if they are flying on a Continental operated flight that day under a Continental flight number.

Locations

The Presidents Club locations are listed below:

Continental Currency

At airport kiosks Continental Airlines allows customers to buy "Continental Currency", a prepaid credit for audio headsets and alcoholic beverages on flights.[47]

Continental allows customers to buy "Continental Currency" in the following quantities:

  • 1 coupon for $5USD
  • 2 for $10
  • 3 for $13 (airline advertises this as a $2 discount)
  • 6 for $25 (airline advertises this as a $5 discount)

Codeshare agreements

Continental Airlines has codeshare agreements with the following airlines as of May 2008:
(This list does not include SkyTeam airlines)

Continental Connection aircraft

Continental Connection has a codeshare with American Eagle (the American Airlines and AMR Corporation equivalent of Continental Express), yet not with American Airlines. Also, American Eagle does not operate as Continental Connection, it codeshares specifically with Continental Connection, not Continental Airlines. The operators of Continental Connection are:

  • CommutAir operates mostly from Continental's Cleveland and Newark hubs.
  • Colgan Air operates out of Houston, Newark, and Cleveland. Colgan, as a subsidiary of Pinnacle Airlines (which currently flies as the largest operator of Northwest Airlink flights), operates Bombardier Q400 aircraft out of Newark and Cleveland and Saab 340B aircraft out of Houston as 'Continental Connection'.
  • Cape Air operates (Continental also has a codeshare with the mainstream Cape Air) in Southern Florida and from Guam to Saipan, Saipan to Rota and Rota to Guam.
  • Gulfstream International Airlines operates in the Bahamas, Miami, Ft. Lauderdale, Orlando, Tampa, and West Palm Beach, Jacksonville, Fort Walton, Tallahassee, Fort Myers, Key West, and Sarasota.

Environmental record

Continental Airlines has made efforts to minimize negative environmental effects of commercial airline activities. Continental employees have made substantial efforts to modify operational activities to reduce environmental impact. The carrier has invested $12 billion for purchase of 270 fuel-efficient aircraft and related equipment.[48] These efforts have contributed to significant reductions of greenhouse gas emissions, and has improved fuel consumption by 45% per mainline revenue passenger mile over the past 10 years.[48]

Continental has implemented a program that affords passengers the opportunity to offset their carbon emissions per flight for a fee of two additional dollars. Funds collected against carbon offsets are directed for tree planting in reforestation areas. Passengers can also contribute $50 dollars or more to fund renewable-energy projects such as wind- or solar-power projects, or to reestablish algae in oceans or large scale reforestation.[49]

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) "Design for the Environment Program" has recognized Continental (2008) for use of a non-chromium aircraft surface pretreatment that is environmentally compatible. Continental Airlines is the first carrier to utilize this technology on their aircraft. The product, "PreKote", eliminates hazardous chemicals that are usually used in the pretreatment phase before repainting aircraft. This technology affords improved environmental conditions for maintenance employees, while also reducing process wastewater.[48]

Continental Airlines is planning flight tests employing a biofuelled aircraft. In 2009, Continental will partner with GE Aviation to conduct a biofuelled demonstration flight, making the carrier the first U.S. carrier actively planning to conduct tests using biofuels.[50]

Continental Airlines has been recognized by NASA and Fortune Magazine for positive environmental contributions.[48]

Incidents and accidents

The following are major incidents and accidents that occurred on Continental Airlines mainline aircraft.

Continental Airlines Reported Incidents
Flight Date Aircraft Location Description Passengers and Crew Injuries
Fatal Serious Minor Ground or Other Injuries/Fatalities
11[51] May 22, 1962 Boeing 707-100 Unionville, MO A passenger intent on claiming money from life insurance planted a bomb on the aircraft which departed Chicago-O’Hare destined for Kansas City Municipal Airport. The bomb exploded, aircraft tail broke off, and the plane crashed on a farm near Unionville, Missouri. All 45 on board died. This aircraft had previously been subject to an attempted hijacking to Cuba, although the hijackers were captured in El Paso, Texas. 45 45
290
[52]
January 29, 1963 Vickers Viscount Kansas City, MO Flight 290 enroute from Midland, Texas to Kansas City when it crashed on approach. The plane crashed near the south end of the runway and burst into flames. 8 8
N/A [53] April 13, 1973 NA-265 Sabreliner Montrose, CO After bringing Bob and Audrey Six to their Colorado ranch, the Sabreliner crew departed MTJ for return flight to LAX; the thrust reverser of the aircraft was deployed in flight shortly after takeoff. The Sabreliner descended from 1000 feet and struck the ground, being instantly destroyed. 2 2
426
[54]
August 15, 1975 Boeing 727-200 Denver, CO Flight 426, bound for Wichita, KS, crashed near departure end of runway. The aircraft's encounter, immediately following take-off, with severe windshear at an altitude and airspeed which precluded recovery level flight; the windshear caused the aircraft to descend at a rate which could not be overcome even though the aircraft was flown at or near its maximum lift capability throughout the encounter. The windshear was generated by the outflow from a thunderstorm which was over the aircraft's departure path. All passengers and crew safely evacuated. Aircraft declared a total loss. Notes: (1) First modern aviation accident where engines continued operating after impact destruction of fuselage (due to new technology flexible fuel lines; and disabling acft power controls); (2) This accident was impetus for FAA to develop and install windshear detecting doppler radar at all principal U.S. airports, and to modify departure procedures during thunderstorm activity. 131 15
603
[55]
March 1, 1978 McDonnell Douglas DC-10 Los Angeles, CA Flight 603 was scheduled to fly to Honolulu, HI from Los Angeles. The DC-10 overran the runway at LAX during an aborted takeoff as a result of a tire explosion resulting in a fire engulfing the aircraft. The aircraft was declared a total loss. 200 2 31 167
1713[56] November 15, 1987 McDonnell Douglas DC-9 Denver, CO Flight 1713 bound for Boise, Idaho crashed on take-off during a snowstorm at Stapleton Intl. Airport. 82 28 28 26
55
[57]
July 25, 2000 McDonnell Douglas DC-10 Paris, France Flight 55 contributed to the crash of Air France Concorde Flight 4590 in Paris. The Continental jet dropped a strip of titanium alloy from its thrust reverser on the runway during its takeoff roll. When AF4590 subsequently departed, Concorde's left main landing gear tires struck the strip of metal and were punctured. The tires exploded as Concorde began its takeoff roll. The tire rubber fragments penetrated Concorde's wing fuel tanks, starting fires in engines 1 and 2, leading to the crash which killed all aboard. According to the official report on the accident, the strip of metal installed on the Continental jet was made from a different alloy than had been approved by the US Federal Aviation Administration or the engine manufacturer. This led French authorities to begin a criminal investigation into Continental Airlines.[58] 113 fatalities
1404 December 20, 2008 Boeing 737-500 Denver, CO Flight 1404 bound for Houston, pulled left and ran off of the runway during its takeoff roll at Denver International Airport. The cause of the incident is unknown, however the right side of aircraft caught fire once coming to a stop. Of the 115 people on board, 38 sustained injuries, with 2 seriously injured, including pilot-in-command.[59] 115 2 36

Minor incidents

  • On July 1, 1965 Continental Airlines Flight 12 ran off the runway at Kansas City Downtown Airport landing in heavy rain. All 66 on board survived.
  • On February 19, 1996, Continental Airlines Flight 1943, a Douglas DC-9-32 aircraft flying from Washington, D.C. to Houston, made a wheels up landing in Houston Intercontinental Airport. There were no fatalities. The cause of the accident was flightcrew's failure to perform the landing checklist and confirm that the landing gear was extended.[60]
  • On May 11, 1997, Continental Airlines Flight 1760, a Boeing 737-500 en route from Houston to Corpus Christi, mistakenly landed at Navy Landing Airfield Cabaniss, a Naval auxiliary field five miles southeast of Corpus Christi International Airport. Passengers waited three hours on board the aircraft while buses were brought in to transport them from the World War II era airfield to the correct airport. The NTSB report cited inadequate in-flight planning and decision and the failure to use navigational aids as the cause of the incident, in which no one was injured.[61]
  • On August 2, 1997, aboard a Continental Airlines Boeing 757-200 in Lima, Peru, a passenger in a wheelchair was left at the top of the air stairs while an agent was bringing the wheelchair for loading. The passenger was reportedly instructed to remain in place. The passenger continued to walk and passed through an open door on the right side of the plane used for catering and fell to the tarmac resulting in death [2]. The incident, not a result of an aircraft crash, initiated an FAA investigation and report because it involved a passenger death.
  • On April 25, 2000, a Continental Airlines DC-10 suffered an uncontained engine failure when 2 of its 3 engines burst through the fan casing. The breach also ruptured the primary hydraulic lines, and blew the tires. The aircraft landed 34 minutes after takeoff on one engine.[3]
  • In a mishap on June 14, 2000, a Continental Airlines MD-80's engines were undergoing a test run, at gate C115 at Newark International Airport, which inadvertently caused it to crash into the gate area with six people aboard, all staff members. Nobody was hurt, but the gate area was damaged. The plane was scheduled to be operated as Continental Airlines Flight 481 to be flown between Newark and Detroit.[62]
  • On 2 March 2005, a Continental Airlines Boeing 777-200ER aircraft, with 14 crew and 198 passengers on board, scraped the tail region on take off from Newark Liberty International Airport. The aircraft landed back uneventfully. The rear pressure bulkhead was found to have been damaged (ref: Flight International, July 2005).
  • On January 16, 2006, a contract mechanic working for Continental Airlines was sucked into the engine of a Boeing 737-500 and killed. The incident took place at El Paso International Airport.[63]
  • On October 28, 2006, Continental Flight 1883, a Boeing 757-200 aircraft carrying 160 passengers, landed on a narrow unoccupied taxiway parallel to runway 29 at Newark Liberty International Airport. No one was injured and both pilots were temporarily removed from flying status duties pending an investigation and have since been reinstated. Potentially confusing runway lighting and pilot error were cited in the investigation.[64]
  • On January 20, 2007, Continental Flight 1838, a Boeing 757, departed George Bush Intercontinental Airport at 11:30 a.m. with 210 passengers. The aircraft bound for Puerto Vallarta, Mexico was forced to divert to McAllen, Texas after the captain, who was on his initial operating experience, became incapacitated while in flight. The check captain, who was acting as first officer, executed a safe landing in McAllen where the captain was pronounced dead.[4]
  • On June 13, 2007, passengers aboard Continental Flight 71 from Amsterdam to Newark endured harsh conditions when raw sewage spilled from one of the lavatories on the aircraft, resulting from a passenger flushing a latex glove. The plane landed at Shannon Airport in Ireland, where an overnight repair attempt was made and took off from Shannon as Continental Flight 1970. The problem resurfaced while the plane was flying over the Atlantic Ocean, and passengers were exposed to overflowed human waste for the remainder of the trip.[65]
  • On March 7, 2008 a Continental Boeing 737-300 from Houston slid off the runway into the grass shortly after landing in Columbus, Ohio. There were no injuries. The accident was caused by poor visibility, due to a major winter storm bringing over a foot of snow to the Columbus area. [66]

See also

Template:Companies portal

References

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  2. ^ a b Continental Airlines To Leave SkyTeam To Join Star Alliance (Official Press Release: June 19, 2008) Cite error: The named reference "star_alliance" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ Continental Airlines Announces New Policy for Same-Day Flight Changes." Continenatl Airlines. 3 July 2008 <http://www.continental.com/web/en-US/apps/vendors/default.aspx?i=PRNEWS>.
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  5. ^ "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-04-03. p. 68.
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  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Christian, J. Scott, former Continental employee and manager, Bring Songs to the Sky: Recollections of Continental Airlines, 1970-1986, Quadran Press, 1998. Cite error: The named reference "Scott" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  8. ^ U.S. Supreme Court, COLORADO COMM'N v. CONTINENTAL, 372 U.S. 714 (1963) 372 U.S. 714 COLORADO ANTI-DISCRIMINATION COMMISSION ET AL. v. CONTINENTAL AIR LINES, INC. CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF COLORADO. No. 146. Argued March 28, 1963. Decided April 22, 1963.
  9. ^ "Continental Airlines Ranked No. 1 World's Most Admired Airline by FORTUNE Magazine". Reuters (2008-03-11). Retrieved on 2008-06-21.
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  12. ^ a b c d e Delaney, Kevin J., Strategic Bankruptcy: How Corporations and Creditors Use Chapter 11 to Their Advantage (ISBN 0-520-07359-2), University of California Press, 1999. Cite error: The named reference "Delaney" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
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  31. ^ Continental Airlines Applies to Fly Nonstop Between New York/Newark and Shanghai, China in Spring 2009, Also proposes through flight service between Cleveland and Shanghai
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  38. ^ Flight International 26 March 1970
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  42. ^ personal collection of Eastern Airlines frequent flyer program newsletters from 1987.
  43. ^ InsideFlyer.com: The First Frequent Flyer Programs
  44. ^ Continental Airlines—Amtrak Alliance
  45. ^ Continental Airlines First to Offer Free Wi-Fi in Airport Lounges
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  49. ^ Gogoi, Pallavi (2008-03-28). "Carbon Offsets Take Flight". BusinessWeek. Retrieved 2008-05-06.
  50. ^ "Airline industry advances use of biofuels". Biodiesel Magazine. Retrieved 2008-05-06.
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  52. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Vickers 812 Viscount N242V Kansas City, MO". Aviation-safety.net. 1963-01-29. Retrieved 2009-01-08.
  53. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident North American NA-265 Sabreliner 60 N743R Montrose, CO". Aviation-safety.net. 1973-04-13. Retrieved 2009-01-08.
  54. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727-224 N88777 Denver-Stapleton International Airport, CO (DEN)". Aviation-safety.net. 1975-08-07. Retrieved 2009-01-08.
  55. ^ http://amelia.db.erau.edu/reports/ntsb/aar/AAR79-01.pdf
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  59. ^ "The Denver Post." December 21,22,23 24, and 26, 2008.
  60. ^ NTSB - Abstract AAR-97/01
  61. ^ NTSB Abstract FTW97IA187
  62. ^ ASN Aircraft accident McDonnell Douglas DC-9-81 N16884 Newark International Airport, NJ (EWR)
  63. ^ "Mechanic sucked into jet engine". CNN.com, January 16, 2006
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  65. ^ Continental apologizes for sewage overflow, MSNBC, Updated June 21, 2007.
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