[Federal Register: December 20, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 245)]
[Notices]               
[Page 78036-78037]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr20de02-120]                         


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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION


Office of the Secretary


 
Review Under 49 U.S.C. 41720 of Delta/Northwest/Continental 
Agreements


AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, Department of Transportation.


ACTION: Extension of waiting period.


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SUMMARY: As required by 49 U.S.C. 41720, Delta Air Lines, Northwest 
Airlines, and Continental Airlines have submitted code-sharing and 
frequent-flyer program reciprocity agreements to the Department for 
review. That statute requires the submission of such agreements between 
major U.S. passenger airlines at least thirty days before the 
agreements' proposed effective date. The statute empowers the 
Department to extend the waiting period for these agreements at the end 
of the thirty-day period. The Department has determined to extend the 
waiting period for the Delta/Northwest/Continental code-share 
agreements for an additional 30 days, from December 21, 2002, to 
January 20, 2003.


FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas Ray, Office of the General 
Counsel, 400 Seventh St., SW., Washington, DC 20590, (202) 366-4731.


SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On August 23, Delta, Northwest, and 
Continental submitted code-sharing and frequent-


[[Page 78037]]


flyer program reciprocity agreements to us for review under 49 U.S.C. 
41720. That statute requires such agreements between major U.S. 
airlines to be submitted to us more than 30 days before their planned 
implementation. We may extend that waiting period by up to 150 days for 
code-sharing agreements and 60 days for other types of agreements. We 
have previously extended the waiting period for the code-sharing 
agreement for a total of 90 days, and we extended the waiting period 
for the frequent flyer agreement for 60 days, the maximum period 
authorized by the statute. 67 FR 59328 (September 20, 2002); 67 FR 
64960 (October 22, 2002); 67 FR 69804 (November 19, 2002). We have 
determined to extend the waiting period for the code-sharing agreement 
for an additional 30 days to give us time to complete our review of the 
Delta/Continental/Northwest agreements.
    As we have stated earlier, the purpose of our review of the 
agreements is to see whether they may reduce competition. Our governing 
statute specifically requires us to consider, in the public interest, 
the objectives of ``avoiding unreasonable industry concentration, 
excessive market domination, monopoly powers, and other conditions that 
would tend to allow at least one air carrier * * * unreasonably to 
increase prices, reduce services, or exclude competition in air 
transportation.'' 49 U.S.C. 40101(a)(10). If we were to determine that, 
separately or in combination, aspects of the agreements constitute 
unfair methods of competition under 49 U.S.C. 41712, we could bar the 
airlines from implementing them. Unfair methods of competition are 
airline agreements and other practices that violate the antitrust laws 
or antitrust principles. See United Air Lines v. CAB, 766 F.2d 1101 
(7th Cir. 1985). The purpose of our current review is to determine 
whether we should institute a formal proceeding to determine whether 
the agreements and the three airlines' proposed relationship violate 
section 41712.
    We have informally reviewed the agreements submitted by Delta, 
Continental, and Northwest, discussed the competitive issues with the 
Justice Department, and given outside parties the opportunity to review 
unredacted copies of the agreements and to submit comments based on 
that review and other information available to such commenters. 67 FR 
69804. We have received comments on the proposed agreements from 
interested parties as recently as today. We have also received 
complaints that the three airlines have allegedly engaged in anti-
competitive conduct in the recent past. We have met with Delta, 
Continental, and Northwest, and with other interested parties. In their 
written comments, a number of parties have requested that we extend the 
waiting period to allow additional time for consideration. See, e.g., 
the November 15, 2002, letter from AirTran, America West, Frontier, 
JetBlue, Midwest Express, Southwest, and Spirit; the November 12, 2002, 
letter from Tom Miller, the Attorney General of Iowa, written on behalf 
of himself and the Attorneys General of Connecticut, the District of 
Columbia, Florida, Maine, Minnesota, New York, and Vermont; the 
November 13, 2002, letter from Senator John Ensign; the November 4, 
2002, letter from Senator James M. Inhofe; and the October 29, 2002, 
letter from Senator Russell D. Feingold.
    While we have not made any final decision, we have advised the 
three airlines that we believe the agreements as presented to us raise 
competitive issues. We have discussed our concerns in detail with the 
three airlines. Because we need additional time to complete our review 
of the agreements and to complete further discussions with interested 
parties, we are extending the waiting period to January 20, 2003.


    Issued in Washington, DC on December 16, 2002.
Read C. Van de Water,
Assistant Secretary for Aviation and International Affairs.
[FR Doc. 02-32195 Filed 12-19-02; 8:45 am]

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