BMI Regional-3
Brunel to Concorde
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Virtute et Industria, et Sumorsaete Ealle
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Perhaps Bristol in terms of passenger numbers with flybmi providing around 2% of the airport's 8.7 mppa through its seven routes from there. One of the routes was Brussels but that will be taken over by CityJet in April, an announcement made some time ago.
Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: Londonderry
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Probably biased as we both know we're locals. Besides the PSO being renewed is fresh in everyone's head and contact has been made between here and Gregory Campbell has said...
"The transport secretary indicated that he is hopeful that a new operator will agree to take on the route.
"There needs to be as seamless a transition as possible from Flybmi to the new operator in order that the travelling public suffer as little as possible."
BRS has lost a great deal of German connections so I would say it could be.
"The transport secretary indicated that he is hopeful that a new operator will agree to take on the route.
"There needs to be as seamless a transition as possible from Flybmi to the new operator in order that the travelling public suffer as little as possible."
BRS has lost a great deal of German connections so I would say it could be.
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: Terra Firma
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Good Midland people were/are working for Regional. I wish them well and I am testimony that here is a life beyond EMA.
good luck to all.
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: UK
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Goodness. I did not see that coming :-( I've worried about them in the past, but for the last year or so they seemed to have the most stable network they've had in a long time.
Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: Dublin, Ireland
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No need for him/her to retract. It was based on pure conjecture at the time but stated as a definitive position. It just happened to be right, but what if it was not? The clown needs to be held to account. He is running to report the story first to lead aviation “journalism” in the Twittersphere. He will call it wrong one day and get sued to hell on a hand cart. Deservedly so when that day comes.
Alex Macheras does himself no favours by making it all about himself. "His exclusive", his coverage of Monarch was a clear pitch to media agencies to pay him to come on air and pontificate as his role as an aviation analyst. Except he categorically isn't an analyst and he has zero industry ceredentials. He's a well connected young man who comes from a VERY wealthy background and runs his own website and pushes out gushing sponsored content. The key point being he gets off on this sort of thing collapse because it raises his media profile.
He makes me sick.
He makes me sick.
Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: Galway ROI
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A real shock as they ' seemed ' stable.
Makes one wonder about others like Eastern as well .
Are they secure , just always seems to be many negative posts on the company over the years .
And part owning HUY, it begs the question why not offer more routes , using their own Aircraft ( sorry off topic ).
Anyway back on BMI.
A sad day my thoughts are with all the people who have lost their way of life .
Another great airline bites the dust .
Pity some kind of Rescue package can't be found ( Eg virgin , they seem to have deep pockets) and it would create a very large domestic carrier ..
Makes one wonder about others like Eastern as well .
Are they secure , just always seems to be many negative posts on the company over the years .
And part owning HUY, it begs the question why not offer more routes , using their own Aircraft ( sorry off topic ).
Anyway back on BMI.
A sad day my thoughts are with all the people who have lost their way of life .
Another great airline bites the dust .
Pity some kind of Rescue package can't be found ( Eg virgin , they seem to have deep pockets) and it would create a very large domestic carrier ..
Join Date: Feb 2016
Location: London
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Alex Macheras may have been right this time but, unlike say Mark Kleinman at Sky who gets a lot of scoops, he does not have the checks and balances on his reporting before he publishes.
When there were rumours about Monarch before it collapsed he caused a lot of genuine distress amongst staff with his relentless social media postings.
When there were rumours about Monarch before it collapsed he caused a lot of genuine distress amongst staff with his relentless social media postings.
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: UK
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I see the airline conveniently blaming their collapse on Brexit. How convenient. Nothing at all to do with any other non-Brexit factors, really? I find that spin as complete denial, here is that spin.
However, meanwhile, and separateky there are more balanced and less lazy journalism and comments:
Source
So basically, the cost cutting that should have been delivered over the past 5 years wasn't fully delivered and it seems convenient to point and oh, look over there, it's Brexit! Not creditable at all. Another example of management failure to aggressively and relentlessly squeeze costs out of the operation. It weakened their ability to withstand fuel price pressures and ATC strikes and chaos they caused. Yes, Brexit is 'one' factor, but the destruction was rooted in much deeper issues from the sound of it.
However, meanwhile, and separateky there are more balanced and less lazy journalism and comments:
Overcapacity in the European aviation sector has resulted in the demise of airline operators such as Monarch Airlines, who were present in both the low-cost airline market and the leisure airline market — while failing to be a market leader in either. The airline faced fierce competition from both sides and collapsed amid its flawed strategy.
both the uncertainties surrounding Brexit and a year-long higher oil price in 2018 have wiped off profits (or attempts to become profitable) at even the most financially stable airline carriers.
So basically, the cost cutting that should have been delivered over the past 5 years wasn't fully delivered and it seems convenient to point and oh, look over there, it's Brexit! Not creditable at all. Another example of management failure to aggressively and relentlessly squeeze costs out of the operation. It weakened their ability to withstand fuel price pressures and ATC strikes and chaos they caused. Yes, Brexit is 'one' factor, but the destruction was rooted in much deeper issues from the sound of it.
Last edited by mik3bravo; 17th Feb 2019 at 07:21.
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Milton Keynes
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I see the airline conveniently blaming their collapse on Brexit.
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Hemel Hempstead
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No, I still believe what he wrote was irresponsible. It read on the basis of fact, without citing sources, even if he couldn't disclose them (regardless of what he had was accurate or not). That is not responsible journalism.
Both FR and EZY are reported offering rescue fares from £9.99 for any stranded BMI pax
I see the airline conveniently blaming their collapse on Brexit. How convenient. Nothing at all to do with any other non-Brexit factors, really? I find that spin as complete denial, here is that spin.
However, meanwhile, and separateky there are more balanced and less lazy journalism and comments:
Source
So basically, the cost cutting that should have been delivered over the past 5 years wasn't fully delivered and it seems convenient to point and oh, look over there, it's Brexit! Not creditable at all. Another example of management failure to aggressively and relentlessly squeeze costs out of the operation. It weakened their ability to withstand fuel price pressures and ATC strikes and chaos they caused. Yes, Brexit is 'one' factor, but the destruction was rooted in much deeper issues from the sound of it.
However, meanwhile, and separateky there are more balanced and less lazy journalism and comments:
Source
So basically, the cost cutting that should have been delivered over the past 5 years wasn't fully delivered and it seems convenient to point and oh, look over there, it's Brexit! Not creditable at all. Another example of management failure to aggressively and relentlessly squeeze costs out of the operation. It weakened their ability to withstand fuel price pressures and ATC strikes and chaos they caused. Yes, Brexit is 'one' factor, but the destruction was rooted in much deeper issues from the sound of it.
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: leeds
Age: 77
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Is it just costs though? I would have said it's markets as well. Thinking back to the days when BMI was strong at Leeds/Bradford, they had the small jets operating to Paris, Brussels, Edinburgh and Glasgow. None of those are viable business/ high end leisure three per day routes now. Those markets have gone, some to rail, a bit of Paris to Jet2, maybe some to business jets. The space in which to operate anything scheduled smaller than a 737 has got smaller and smaller. The contract market such as Toulouse, Stuttgart, oil industry traffic etc seems to have got weaker. Cost control--- sure, but that can only take you so far.
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: UK
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So why haven't the management taken aggressive decisive actions on the past couple of years to get ahead of this, asleep at the wheel comes to mind and now they've ruined employees futures. How some of these so called 'directors' gain employment after the fact deserves investigative journalism piece, the old boys network is alive.