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Holiday Airlines (US airline)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
California intrastate airline serving Tahoe (1965–1975)
Holiday Airlines
IATAICAOCall sign
HD[1]HOLHOLIDAY
Founded1965 (1965)[2]
Commenced operations15 June 1965 (1965-06-15)
Ceased operations6 February 1975 (1975-02-06)[3][4]
Focus citiesLake Tahoe
Fleet size3
HeadquartersOakland(1965–1970)
Los Angeles(1970–1975)
Key peopleHenry Kengla
Harry A. Trueblood, Jr.
John McCandish King
Holiday AirlinesLockheed L-188 Electra (N971HA)

Holiday Airlines was a Californiaintrastate airline. Holiday operated scheduled passenger service withLockheed Electra turboprops in California almost exclusively servingLake Tahoe fromSouthern California and theSan Francisco Bay Area during period 1965–1975.[5][6] Holiday started roughly contemporaneously withAir California but the two airlines had different trajectories.

It is not to be confused with Holiday Airlines, a 1980s commuter air carrier in the northeast U.S. operatingBeechcraft 1900 andde Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter aircraft under the JOIATA airline code.[7][8]

History

[edit]

Startup thru Electras

[edit]

Henry P. Kengla started flying a pair ofde Havilland Dove aircraft fromSan Jose andOakland on June 15, 1965 under the name "Holiday Airlines" as asole proprietor for a fare of $11.95. Kengla was an original partner and former vice-president and director of operations forParadise Airlines but resigned prior to thenotorious accident that shut Paradise in March 1964. His wife, also involved with Holiday, was the former head flight attendant for Paradise. Kengla started flying before the September 17, 1965 effective date of the California legislation that required approval by theCalifornia Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to start an airline and thus, as a sole proprietor, was grandfathered. But he incorporated as Holiday Airlines, Inc. after the legislation and thus ran afoul of the CPUC, which said he had no right to transfer his grandfathered operating rights to another entity. After rapping Kengla on the knuckles, the CPUC granted the new corporation the requisite authority on December 6, 1966.[9][10][11] Air California was certified three months earlier, but would first fly in January 1967.[12]

On August 18, 1967, Holiday upgraded to aDC-3, retiring the Doves.[13] In April 1968 it added aDC-6.[14] After an extension to the Tahoe runway, Holiday added two Electras acquired fromPacific Southwest Airlines (PSA), including flights toBurbank. The first Electra went into service November 8, 1968, the second on March 7, 1969.[15][16][17]

Public company

[edit]
971HA taking off from Burbank in 1970

On October 28, 1969, Holiday completed aninitial public offering (IPO) (400,000 shares at $7.50), making it apublic company.[18] A 1970 article by the Los Angeles Times based in part on the IPO prospectus, showed that the main shareholder was Harry A. Trueblood, Jr., aDenver oilman, and that another Denver figure,John McCandish King, had a significant influence, including leasing an aircraft to the airline through one of his companies.[19] In 1973, Holiday Airlines, Inc. changed its name to Holiday Resources, Inc, with a new operating subsidiary created as Holiday Airlines Corporation.[20]

Holiday ultimately also expanded toLos Angeles International Airport (LAX) (1971) andSan Diego (1972). At LAX, Holiday used the so-calledWest Imperial Terminal, on the south side of the airport.[21]

Non-economic

[edit]

Holiday was non-economic. From its first fiscal year (ending October 31, 1966) through September 30, 1972, the airline lost a cumulative $4.16mm on cumulative revenues of $6.93mm. After 1970, financial institutions would not permit it to borrow. Holiday made a small profit in the summers, and then gave it back and more in the winters.[22]

Holiday Airlines Financial Results, Financial Years 1966 thru 1972[22]
YE Oct 3111moE Sep 30YE Sep 30
USD 00019661967196819691970(1)19711972
Op revenue124.989.6127.11,238.12,179.01,453.01,721.3
Op expense166.5257.1658.82,652.53,317.21,960.82,012.8
Op result(41.6)(167.6)(531.7)(1,414.4)(1,138.2)(507.8)(291.4)
Non operating(2.2)(5.0)(0.3)(113.6)29.222.0(3.3)
Net loss(43.8)(172.6)(532.0)(1,528.0)(1,109.0)(485.9)(294.8)
Op margin-33%-187%-418%-114%-52%-35%-17%
Net margin-35%-193%-419%-123%-51%-33%-17%
(1) Changed financial year end in 1970 from Oct 31 to Sep 30

Holiday put itself in a box. It had Electras as early as 1968 and the proceeds of an IPO in 1970, yet until close to the end, Holiday applied only for routes that involved Tahoe. In stark contrast is Air California, which only started flying in 1967, also with two Electras; every single one of its routes was granted by the CPUC (PSA came into the CPUC era with grandfathered routes). From 1966 onward Air California and PSA competed at the CPUC for routes. Holiday never asked for anything outside of Tahoe. Particularly notable is that at the end of 1969, Air California won routes betweenPalm Springs and the Bay Area.[23] Those would have been seasonally complementary to Holiday's Tahoe business, but Holiday was silent. Moreover, the CPUC explicitly saw itself as obligated to ensure the survival of carriers it regulated,[24] so there was good reason to believe that it would have made some non-Tahoe awards to Holiday. But Holiday never asked and remained a subscale niche player.

Too little, too late, too bureaucratic

[edit]

Towards the end, Holiday made ineffectual attempts to escape the trap, substantially hindered by bureaucracy. Holiday had multi-stop flights to/from Tahoe, but until 1973 the CPUC required all tickets on Holiday to either originate or terminate in Tahoe, so as not to disturb the intrastate carrier (generally PSA or Air California) that had the intermediate stages. Holiday wanted to sell intermediate stages so long as a flight started or ended in Tahoe. For example, on a flight from Tahoe to San Diego via LAX, Holiday wanted to sell the LAX to San Diego leg, even though that competed with PSA. In late 1973, the CPUC said that would be OK.[22] Returning to that example, in April 1974, there were over 30 jet flights (ten of them PSA's) from LAX to San Diego, with equipment ranging in size fromDC-9s toDC-10s. Holiday had two turboprop flights.[25] In other words, this decision did little to improve Holiday's situation.

At the end of 1974, PSA and Air California applied to the CPUC for Tahoe, noting that they could do a much better job than Holiday, then the sole Tahoe provider.[26] In response, Holiday finally asked for routes outside of Tahoe, but then withdrew, saying the CPUC process had become an overwhelming financial burden for a small airline.[27][28] Holiday wasn't wrong. The 1973 CPUC decision referenced above was the result of a process that started over 10 months earlier with three days of public hearings in Tahoe, four days of public hearings in San Francisco, and briefs and supporting evidence submitted almost six months before the decision, and ended with the CPUC producing 15 pages of closely-written quasi-juridical reasoning, with findings of fact, findings of law, references to past cases and a formal order. Each of Holiday and five opposing airlines had consultants and/or lawyers, all listed in the decision (one of Holiday's consultants wasEd Beauvais, later the founder ofAmerica West Airlines).[22] But that was just the start. In 1974, an appeal was granted (the CPUC produced a page of reasoning to justify an appeal of its own decision).[29] This resulted in another process, lasting over six months, no hearings this time but more briefs and submissions, with the CPUC affirming (in January 1975) its prior decision with another 21 pages of reasoning.[30] This was somewhat futile, because Holiday stopped flying a month later on February 6, 1975.[3]

With no intrastate Tahoe service, the CPUC had to act quickly, giving emergency authorization to PSA and Air California to serve Tahoe, with the stipulation they use Electras.[31] Between PSA and AirCal, passengers at South Lake Tahoe in the year ending June 1976 increased to 2.5 times the previous yearly high.[32]

Fleet

[edit]

From 1969 onward Holiday Airlines generally had two Lockheed Electras, registrations N971HA and N974HA. The US Civil Aircraft registry for January 1975 (shortly before Holiday shut down) reflects a third Electra, N972HA.

Holiday Airlines Fleet January 1, 1975[33][34]
RegistrationSerialVariantYearOwner
N971HA188C-1091L-188C1959Petroleum Investment Services
N972HA188A-1114L-188A1960Holiday Airlines Corporation
N974HA188A-1001L-188A1957Petroleum Investment Services

Destinations

[edit]

The airline served the following destinations in California during its existence:[35][36]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"LAX74intro".
  2. ^"America's Airports: Tale of a Gem".www.aopa.org. 3 January 2008. Retrieved28 March 2019.
  3. ^abAirline Halts Scheduled Flights To S. Lake Tahoe, Sacramento Bee, February 7, 1975
  4. ^"Lake Tahoe Airport's heyday is long past, but facility may soar again".www.tahoedailytribune.com. 23 January 2008. Retrieved28 March 2019.
  5. ^"Airline Timetable Images".www.timetableimages.com. Retrieved2021-03-10.
  6. ^"History of Holiday Airlines".departedwings.com. Retrieved28 March 2019.
  7. ^"Holiday Airlines (2)".www.timetableimages.com. Retrieved2021-03-10.
  8. ^"Holiday Airlines October 5, 1987 Route Map".www.departedflights.com. Retrieved2021-03-10.
  9. ^Oakland to Tahoe Air Taxi Starts, Sacramento Bee, June 17, 1965
  10. ^Oakland-Lake Tahoe Air Taxi Busy, Oakland Tribune, August 6, 1965
  11. ^"Decision No. 71648, Application No. 47901, Case No. 8405".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.66:537–545. 1966.hdl:2027/uc1.b3274574.
  12. ^"Decision No. 71310, Application No. 47843, Application No. 47913, Application No. 48406".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.66:230–236. 1966.hdl:2027/uc1.b3274574.
  13. ^Air Taxi Service Flies Higher, Oakland Tribune, August 19, 1967
  14. ^Holiday Air Gets New Boss, Plane, Oakland Tribune, April 14, 1968
  15. ^Tahoe Runway Reopens, Sacramento Bee, October 26, 1968
  16. ^Holiday Airlines advertisement in Los Angeles Times, November 14, 1968
  17. ^"Decision No. 76814, Application No. 51403".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.70: 713, 717. 1970.hdl:2027/uc1.b3274578.
  18. ^Tombstone in Los Angeles Times, October 29, 1969
  19. ^Holiday Airlines Has a Connection: It Goes to Tahoe With Help From Denver, Los Angeles Times, June 22, 1970
  20. ^"D 81169, A 53569".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.75: 100. 1973.hdl:2027/uc1.b3274583.
  21. ^Holiday Airlines timetable from November 1974, Accessed March 23, 2024
  22. ^abcd"Decision No. 81893, Application No. 53266".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.75:554–569. 1973.hdl:2027/uc1.b3274583.
  23. ^"D 76397, A 51194".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.70: 369. 1969.hdl:2027/uc1.b3221776.
  24. ^La Mond, Annette M. (Autumn 1976)."An Evaluation of Intrastate Airline Regulation in California".The Bell Journal of Economics.7 (2): 644.doi:10.2307/3003277.JSTOR 3003277. RetrievedMarch 2, 2024.
  25. ^LAX to San Diego schedule effective April 1, 1974
  26. ^PSA Seeking Tahoe Routes, Santa Cruz Sentinel, September 24, 1974
  27. ^Los Angeles airline seeks stopover in Redding, Redding Record-Searchlight, September 30, 1974
  28. ^Airline Drops Redding Plan, Redding Record-Searchlight, January 8, 1975
  29. ^"Decision No. 82631, Application No. 53266".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.76:477–478. 1974.hdl:2027/umn.31951d026397224.
  30. ^"Decision NO. 83962, Application No. 53266".Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission of the State of California.78:4–25. 1975.hdl:2027/uc1.b3274586.
  31. ^Airlines To Serve Tahoe Area, Petaluma Argus-Courier, February 20, 1975
  32. ^"Lake Tahoe Service Investigation".Civil Aeronautics Board Reports.76. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office: 755. February–May 1978.hdl:2027/osu.32437011657554.
  33. ^U.S. Civil Aircraft Register (Report). Vol. II. Department of Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, Aeronautical Center. January 1, 1975.hdl:2027/mdp.39015023915740.
  34. ^In the Matter of Holiday Airlines Corporation, 647 F.2d 977 (9th Cir. 1981)
  35. ^"Holiday Airlines April 15, 1974 Route Map".www.departedflights.com. Retrieved2021-03-10.
  36. ^"Holiday Airlines (1)".www.timetableimages.com. Retrieved2021-03-10.

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