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Articles Tagged ‘Montreal’

Delta, US Airways restore frequent flier benefits

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Business travel By Joe Brancatelli

MILEAGE METER

Delta and US Airways Bow to Their Most Frequent Fliers: Faced with an unprecedented blowback from its elite SkyMiles customers, Delta Air Lines has changed the rules on its new Coach Choice program, which charges $5-25 for a seat assignment in supposedly preferred coach seats. Elite SkyMiles members will once again be able to select any coach seat at the time of booking without charge. Delta will continue to charge travelers without status, however. Meanwhile, US Airways has restored bonus miles for its elite fliers after months of criticism from its best customers. Effective immediately, silver members will receive a 25 percent bonus per flight; gold members receive a 50 percent bonus; platinum fliers receive a 75 percent bonus; and Chairman’s Preferred members receive 100 percent bonuses. Elites will also receive the bonuses retroactively for any flight taken after August 6, when US Airways first eliminated them. At the same time, US Airways announced that it is restoring the 500-mile minimum per flight for all Dividend Miles customers. … United Airlines has a new partner for Mileage Plus: Jet Airways of India. Effective December 15, Mileage Plus members can earn and burn on the respected private Indian airline, except for its soon-to-be-discontinued flight from San Francisco to Shanghai.

INTERNATIONAL ITINERARY

Suddenly, Everyone Wants to Fly to Geneva: The French-speaking crowd that dominates Geneva has always resented that Switzerland‘s main hub is in German-speaking Zurich. They hated it when now-defunct Swissair ended most of its international service at Geneva in the mid-1990s. And they even supported a Geneva-based carrier called Swiss World Airways, which lasted less than 90 days in 1998. So it’s notable that both Air Canada and United Airlines this week said they would launch new service into Geneva. United said it would launch flights from its Washington/Dulles hub on April 19 with a Boeing 767 configured with first class, United’s new business class and coach. And Air Canada says it will launch a Toronto-Montreal-Geneva route on June 2 using a Boeing 767. United has also announced that it will revive its Denver-London/Heathrow route on a seasonal basis between March and October. The airline launched Denver-London service earlier this year and killed it six months later. Travelers to India take note: Jet Airways is dropping its Brussels-Bangalore nonstop on January 12.

COCONUT WIRELESS

Oh, Those Wacky Hawaiian Skies: It’s never boring on the Hawaii inter-island routes. After Aloha Airlines folded earlier this year before the courts could consider its lawsuit against mainland interloper go! and Hawaiian Airlines won a big settlement from go!, things settled down a bit. Fares jumped up and it looked as if Hawaiian and go! would dominate the primary routes. But Mokulele Airlines launched 70-seat regional jet flights on a major inter-island route late last month and has announced its intention to go head-to-head with Hawaiian and go!. The flights will be operated for Mokulele by Republic Airlines, a well-known mainland commuter carrier. What’s odd there? Mokulele has been operating as the commuter partner of go!, which is owned by Mesa, itself a large mainland commuter carrier. Naturally, Mokulele and Mesa are now suing each other, alleging everything from non-payment of bills to anti-competitive activity.

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Joe Brancatelli is editor and publisher of JoeSentMe.com, a non-commercial Web site for business travelers. Copyright 2008 by Joe Brancatelli. Licensed by contract for Orbitz use.

Vancouver to Montreal: Festival season across Canada

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Montrealjazzfest
By Lena Katz

Most of us don’t think about our northern neighbors enough. Well, at least I don’t; I’m a cold-weather wimp. But around June, when temperatures in California get hot enough to melt car tires (no lie), a run to the Canadian border doesn’t sound like such a bad idea. Particularly since Canadians party when the sun shines.

First mention goes to Montreal — a city that never stops partying, and therefore has endeared itself to me forever. Summer here is basically one outdoor festival after another, with live music and street fairs and amazing food all over the city. The most famous of all is JazzFest (which, as Quebecois people are constantly telling me, is not just about jazz). Leonard Cohen is coming out of Buddhist retreat for a ‘pre-concert’ on June 24, but the official dates are June 26-July 6.

Immediately on the heels of JazzFest follows another huge Canadian annual that’s way over on the other edge of the spectrum: the Calgary Stampede. Oil billionaires, cowboys, city slickers, First Nations folk (Canada’s politically correct term for Native Americans), and gawking tourists from all around make up the 1 million+ Stampede participants. The 10-day program offers up rodeos, midway carnivals, and enough live country music to make your spurs jangle. Dates: July 4-13.

Making up the third part of this colorful and unlikely triumvirate is Vancouver‘s annual Pride Week. Now in its 30th year, this ever-growing celebration of diversity and "cabaret spirit" is expecting upward of 300,000 attendees. The 2008 theme is "Celebrating 30 Years of the Rainbow," and promises to be full of disco queens and house music all night long. Dates July 26-August 3.

And of course, while on the subject of Canada celebrations, let’s give a shout out for Canada Day. Happy Birthday to You, neighbor! The date of Canadian confederation is July 1, in case you didn’t know…meaning that with a little planning, people with stamina can keep celebrating straight through July 4.

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Lena Katz lives on the Left Coast and writes about
tropical islands, beach clubs and food, but her heart belongs to NYC.