Commentary and Opinion by Samuel Strait – January 7, 2023 – Picture credit to Advanced Air
Contour Airlines out, Advanced Air in, so say the Border Coast Airport
Authority. The question becomes is the new situation any better?
According to those in the know, only marginally, due to the fact that
Advanced Air will offer flights from Crescent City to Oakland, nothing
really new, AND flights to Los Angles. Before anyone gets too excited,
the flights by Advanced Air to Los Angeles will not terminate at LAX,
but at Hawthorne Jet Center a shuttle trip away. Shuttle to be provided
by Advanced Air. It will still require luggage transfer, check in, and
security clearance for connecting flights. It is unclear at this point
whether or not the same will occur at Oakland, but connecting flights at
SFO do not mention a shuttle.
As far as Contour Air, Crescent City appears to be the only orphan
remaining from its entrance into the California Market several years ago
and its new direction in Utah has made Contour decide to shed its
Crescent City-Oakland route in favor of that market by March 16th. In
September, the end of the existing contract to provide service from
Crescent City will once again be up for grabs. Ticket holders for
Contour Air will be given refunds for any flight scheduled after March
16th. Hopefully Advanced Air will fill in the gap of service from March
17th to the end of the contract in September. The equipment used will
continue to be thirty passenger jets, the Dornier 328.

Service to Oakland will continue along the same lines as had occurred
with Contour, one daily flight with some additional flights on
weekends. Advanced Air will be offering two flights weekly to Hawthorne
initially, then perhaps more should they retain the contract after
September. The conversation is to expand service to five flights weekly
by 2025.
While the Border Coast Authority is viewing this as a win for the air
passenger out of Crescent City, and a chance to expand the number of
tourists to the North Coast, keep in mind that passenger enplanements
were less than 10,000 for Contour Air while only serving Crescent
City-Oakland. Loss of service to SFO reduced enplanements by about
40%. Most passenger who used to fly out of Crescent City have been
using Medford for some time and the new service to Hawthorne may not
attract much business for some time to come. What is particularly
noticeable is that there doesn’t appear to be much of an appetite by the
BCAA to check into service to San Francisco and Sacramento and air
service out of Crescent City may not improve much if at all.
While service to Los Angeles may seem like a win for air travelers from
the North Coast, the combination of having to transfer to LAX should
there be a continuing flight, and only two flights per week may not be
the panacea for fixing the poor numbers of passengers utilizing the
Crescent City Airport. At least on a couple of days a week the current
“white elephant” terminal may get at least more usage…two days a week?

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