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Travel Roundup: Delta Drops Gates, Cincinnati Conventions Rise, Alaska Cites Cruise Ships and More

By Barbara E. Hernandez | Feb 16, 2009

Delta drops 170 gatesDelta Air Lines Inc. will drop about 170 gates nationwide, including one in St. Louis, as one of the final steps towards integrating its operations with the former Northwest Airlines Corp. At Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, Delta plans to give up one of the Northwest gates at the airport, leaving four. Delta expects merging gates will save hundreds of millions of dollars in airport lease costs. [Source: St. Louis Business Journal]

Cincinnati’s convention business rose in 2008 – Cincinnati USA Convention and Visitors Bureau showed that convention business grew about 6.7 percent from 2007. The figures, based on total room nights, are also expected to grow another 3 percent in 2009. Officials believe it was the combination of an expanded downtown convention center and increased marketing that caused the rise. [Source: Cincinnati Enquirer]

Alaska tickets cruise ships for pollution – Alaska regulators cited eight cruise ships for air quality violations last year. After taking 224 readings, the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation issued notices to ships owned by Celebrity Cruises, International Shipping Partners, Princess Cruises, Norwegian Cruise Line, Holland America and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. [Source: Associated Press]

Palo Alto, Calif. mulls new hotel tax — The City of Palo Alto is studying a new ordinance that would tax hotel guests staying longer than 30 days. Currently hotel customers pay a 12 percent transient-occupancy tax on stays 30 days or less, which totals about $8 million annually for the city. [Source: Palo Alto Online]

Bay Area resident and award-winning business journalist Barbara E. Hernandez has covered tourism, real estate and personal finance. Her clients include the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle and Washington Post.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • S&P upgrades Lambert's financial outlook

    Bizjournals - 306 days 12 hours 2 minutes ago

    Standard & Poor's affirmed Lambert-St. Louis International Airport's BBB+ debt rating and upgraded the airport's financial outlook from stable to positive. The action came last month after a routine review of Lambert's financial performance, the airport and St. Louis Comptroller Darlene Green's office said Wednesday. The comptroller's office...

  • How Lambert Police Did It

    Aviation Week - 245 days 19 hours 35 minutes ago

    Like a police department anywhere, the men in blue at Lambert-St. Louis International Airport monitor reports of thefts.  In January, they noticed a trend in reports of baggage thefts that directed them to a certain area of the airport and specifically to the baggage operations of Delta Air Lines.  Then detectives got a tip from an employee of...

  • Southwest: We are now 'the dominant airline serving St. Louis'

    USA Today - 28 days 21 hours 28 minutes ago

    From USA TODAY's Airport Check-in column: Southwest will add daily non-stop flights to six destinations from Lambert-St. Louis. The discount carrier plans to start non-stop service in May 2010 to the following cities: Nashville (two daily round trips) Raleigh/Durham (one), New Orleans (one), Los Angeles (two), Seattle (one) and San Diego (one)....

  • Airport Check-in: New checkpoint to speed up St. Louis security

    USA Today - 4 days 19 hours 33 minutes ago

    From USA TODAY's Airport Check-in column: Lambert-St. Louis has opened a second checkpoint in the East Terminal, adding two lanes to its original

  • Small victories

    The Economist - 9 days 10 hours 51 minutes ago

    21:06 GMT +00:00 AMERICA'S Transportation Security Administration has revised its airport security screening procedures in response to a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU said last week. The new guidelines make clear that TSA agents can only conduct searches that are aimed at enhancing airline passenger safety and...

 

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