PSA Airlines

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For the defunct airline, see Pacific Southwest Airlines
PSA Airlines
IATA
US
ICAO
JIA
Callsign
BLUE STREAK
Founded 1980
Hubs Charlotte/Douglas International Airport
Focus cities Pittsburgh International Airport
Philadelphia International Airport
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
Frequent flyer program Dividend Miles
Member lounge US Airways Club
Alliance Star Alliance
Fleet size 49
Destinations
Parent company US Airways Group
Headquarters Vandalia, Ohio
Key people Keith Houk (CEO)
Derek Kerr (CFO)
Website: http://www.psaairlines.com

PSA Airlines is an American regional airline based in Dayton, Ohio, USA that flies under US Airways Express brand for US Airways. PSA is wholly owned by US Airways Group. PSA has crew bases in Knoxville, Tennessee, Charlotte, North Carolina and Dayton, Ohio. It has maintenance bases in Charlotte, North Carolina, Dayton, Ohio, and at the Akron-Canton Regional Airport in Akron, Ohio.

In addition to flying commuter aircraft for US Airways, PSA operates several ground stations on their behalf in the eastern United States, including the express operation at US Airways' Pittsburgh International Airport secondary hub.[citation needed]

Contents

The airline was established in 1979 as Vee Neal Airlines (named after its owner vee Neal Frey) and began operating from Latrobe, Pennsylvania. On 1 May 1980 the operation was expanded to include scheduled air services between Latrobe and Pittsburgh with a Cessna 402. The airline was renamed to Jetstream International Airlines (JIA) in December, 1983 to reflect the fact that it had just taken delivery of two Jetstream aircraft. A year later the airline moved from Latrobe to Erie, Pennsylvania. On 26 September 1985 the airline affiliated itself with Piedmont Airlines and on 1 August 1986 JIA became a wholly owned subsidiary. Following the USAir acquisition of Piedmont in November 1987, JIA began operating as Allegheny Commuter from the USAir hub in Philadelphia. On 1 July 1988 JIA became a wholly owned subsidiary of USAir and began operating in the colors of US Air Express, later US Airways Express [1]. On November 1, 1995 USAir renamed the recently acquired JIA to PSA in order to protect the trademark of Pacific Southwest Airlines, which was once a large carrier on the West Coast that USAir had acquired. Since the acquisition by US Airways, PSA has transitioned from a fleet of turboprop aircraft to an all-jet fleet. [2]

For the destinations of all US Airways Group airlines, see: US Airways destinations.

Fleet data as of August 2006 [3] :

PSA Airlines Fleet
Aircraft Total Passengers Notes
Bombardier CRJ-200LR 35
(1 order)
50
Bombardier CRJ-700ER 14
(24 orders)
70

In July 2007, PSA Airlines average fleet age is 4 years old [4]

  1. ^ Flight International 12-18 April 2005
  2. ^ http://www.airfleets.net/ageflotte/?file=calcop&opp=PSA%20Airlines%20(US%20Airways%20Express)
  3. ^ Flight International, 3-9 October 2006
  4. ^ PSA Airlines Fleet Age
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