Tag: moves

  • US Consulate in Hyderabad ends operations at Paigah Palace, moves to Nanakramguda

    US Consulate in Hyderabad ends operations at Paigah Palace, moves to Nanakramguda

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    Hyderabad: US Consulate in Hyderabad on Wednesday officially ended operations at Paigah Palace and gears up to re-open the facility in Nanakramguda on Monday, March 20.

    Yesterday, the consulate lowered the US flag at the palace located at Begumpet, Hyderabad.

    Later, US Consul General Hyderabad Jennifer Larson tweeted, ‘Today we lowered the U.S. flag at Paigah Palace for the last time. It’s been an amazing 14 years here and we’re excited to open a new chapter in the U.S.-India partnership at our new facility in Nanakramguda’.

    New address of US Consulate in Hyderabad’s Nanakramguda

    The US Consulate is shifting to its new address in Nanakramguda, Hyderabad. On Monday, the US flag will be raised at the new facility.

    As of March 20, the address of the U.S. Consulate in Hyderabad will be Sy. No. 115/1, Financial District, Nanakramguda, Hyderabad, Telangana, 500032.

    The US Consulate in Hyderabad which is going to be the largest one in South Asia was built with an investment of USD 297 billion.

    Apart from 54 visa procession windows, the consulate office which is constructed on a 12.2-acre site will have many new features.

    US Consulate at Paigah Palace began operation in 2009

    The US Consulate office in Hyderabad which is the first US diplomatic office to open in India after 1947 began its operation in 2009.

    Till March 15, it was housed in Paigah Palace, Chiran Fort Lane, Hyderabad. It covers three states viz., Telangana State, Andhra Pradesh, and Odisha.

    The palace was built by Sir Vicar-ul-Umra who was a Paigah nobleman and it is spread on four-acre land. It is a double-storied building.

    In the past 14 years, the US Consulate approved over 16 lakh visas and processed 42511 citizenship services. Now, the US authorities are looking forward to surpass those numbers.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • BJP leader moves PIL seeking compulsory voting in Parliament, Assembly polls

    BJP leader moves PIL seeking compulsory voting in Parliament, Assembly polls

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    New Delhi: BJP leader and practicing lawyer Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay moved a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in the Delhi High Court on Wednesday seeking compulsory voting in Parliament and Assembly elections.

    With an aim to increase the voters’ turnout, promote political participation, improve the quality of democracy and to secure the right to vote, the petitioner also sought direction from the Law Commission to prepare a report on ‘Compulsory Voting’.

    According to his plea, the low voter turnout is a persistent problem in India and compulsory voting can help resolve this, particularly among marginalised communities.

    “It ensures that every citizen has a voice and that the government is representative of the people’s wishes. When voter turnout is high, the government is more accountable to the people and is more likely to act in their best interests,” the PIL stated.

    “Compulsory voting ensures that the elected representatives are chosen by a larger and more representative group of people. This increases the legitimacy of the government and enhances the quality of democracy,” the plea further stated.

    It has been said that when voter turnout is low, the government may not be representative of the people’s wishes, and this can lead to a lack of trust in the democratic process.

    “Compulsory voting can help to ensure that the government is truly representative of the people,” it said.

    The plea further stated that ‘Compulsory Voting’ is in practice in many countries.

    “The Constitution provides for the right to vote as a fundamental right under Article 326. This right is subject to reasonable restrictions imposed by law. Compulsory voting can be implemented as reasonable restriction in the interest of ensuring the smooth functioning of democracy. The Supreme Court has also held that the right to vote is a statutory right, and the government has the power to impose reasonable restrictions on this right,” it added.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • AI urination case: Shankar Mishra moves Delhi HC against ‘unruly passenger’ tag

    AI urination case: Shankar Mishra moves Delhi HC against ‘unruly passenger’ tag

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    New Delhi: Air passenger Shankar Mishra, who is accused of urinating on an elderly female co-passenger on a New York-Delhi Air India flight, has moved the Delhi High Court seeking constitution of an appellate committee to hear his appeal against his designation as an “unruly passenger” and banning him from flying for four months.

    As a single-judge bench of Justice Prathiba M. Singh took up the matter, counsel for the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) stated that the committee is already in place.

    The court then asked the DGCA counsel to place the constitution of the appellate committee before the court within a week’s time and listed the case for the next hearing on March 23.

    Mishra, who was arrested by the Delhi Police from Bengaluru on January 7 for allegedly urinating on a 70-year-old woman while in a drunken state on a flight last November, was granted bail on January 31 by national capital’s Patiala House Court.

    Additional Sessions Judge Harjyot Singh Bhalla had granted bail on the bail bond of Rs 1 lakh, holding that what Mishra has allegedly done is disgusting but the court is bound to follow the law.

    Mishra has claimed in his plea where the DGCA, Ministry of Civil Aviation and Air India have been made respondents, that on December 20, 2022, the complainant woman filed a complaint against him on the Airsewa grievance portal.

    Air India established an internal inquiry committee in response to the accusation. The committee issued an order on January 18, 2023, identifying him as a “unruly passenger” and banning him from flying for four months.

    According to the petition, paragraph 8.5 of the Civil Aviation Requirements (CAR) for Handling Unruly Passengers provides that anyone who is unhappy with an inquiry committee’s decision may file an appeal before an appellate committee established by the Ministry of Civil Aviation within 60 days of the decision.

    “The Petitioner, being aggrieved by the order dated January 18, 2023 on grounds of the aforementioned factual and legal infirmities seeks to prefer an appeal against the said order and has written emails to the DGCA on January 19 and to the Ministry of Civil Aviation on February 20, 27 and March 6. However, no such committee has been constituted as of the date of filing this Writ Petition,” the plea stated.

    The plea further said that it is an established position of law that a statutory right of appeal is a vested right and the non-constitution of the appellate committee by the Ministry of Civil Aviation is eroding his right to exhaust all his remedies available unto him.

    “As such, the Ministry of Civil Aviation’s inaction is directly infringing the petitioner’s rights under Article 21 of the Constitution,” it said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Delhi liquor policy scam: K Kavitha moves SC over ED summons

    Delhi liquor policy scam: K Kavitha moves SC over ED summons

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    Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) MLC K Kavitha and Telangana chief minister’s daughter moved the Supreme Court over the Enforcement Directorate’s (ED) summons in connection with a money laundering case arising out of the alleged Delhi excise policy scam.

    The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to hear her petition on March 24.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Biden mourns with families of California shooting victims and moves to close gun loophole

    Biden mourns with families of California shooting victims and moves to close gun loophole

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    His remarks framed what the White House portrayed as a significant advance in gun safety, an executive order intended to move the U.S. as close to universal background checks as possible without additional legislation.

    The executive action directs Attorney General Merrick Garland to close a gray area in existing gun sales laws that have allowed some vendors to operate without conducting background checks. The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which Biden signed into law last summer, requires anyone who sells firearms for profit to run background checks. Garland will be tasked with defining who qualifies as a gun dealer.

    “It’s just common sense to check whether someone is a felon, a domestic abuser before they buy a gun,” Biden said.

    Among other directives, the executive order asked Biden’s Cabinet to focus on public awareness campaigns around red flag laws and safe gun storage and encouraged the Federal Trade Commission to publish a report on how manufacturers market firearms to adults and minors. The action also calls for his administration to speed up the implementation of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act.

    The president’s move comes as state leaders renewed calls for federal action amid a violent start to 2023, which has already witnessed 164 victims in 110 mass shootings — incidents where at least four people are shot.

    “I know what it’s like to get that call,” Biden told the crowd on Tuesday. “… I know what it’s like to lose a loved one so suddenly. It’s like losing a piece of your soul.”

    While the White House has made historic strides on gun policy, the flurry of mass shootings this year has spurred a renewed pressure campaign from gun safety advocates. Now with a split Congress, gun safety groups have said Biden has a responsibility to roll out further reform. Advocates have pushed administration officials on Tuesday’s executive order for months.

    Biden used his speech to re-up his calls for lawmakers to take further action on gun violence.

    “Let’s be clear: None of this absolves Congress from the responsibility of acting,” he said. “Pass universal background checks. Eliminate gun manufacturer immunity and liability. And I’m determined, once again, to ban assault weapons and high capacity magazines.”

    Two of the three deadliest mass shootings this year have taken place in California, according to the Gun Violence Archive, despite the state having some of the country’s strictest firearm policies and a gun death rate 37 percent below the national average. Just days after the Monterey Park shooting, a disgruntled worker killed seven people at a mushroom farm in rural Half Moon Bay.

    In the case of the Monterey Park shooting, Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna has said the semi-automatic handgun used by the 72-year-old gunman was most likely acquired illegally.

    State leaders nationally have also said more needs to be done at the federal level in light of a Supreme Court ruling in June that struck down New York’s concealed carry law. That has given rise to subsequent challenges to state gun laws, including California’s longstanding ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and a provision barring 18-to-20-year-olds from buying semi automatic weapons.

    After Tuesday’s speech, Biden was scheduled to meet with first responders and victims’ families as he has done so many times before in the wake of a mass tragedy. He’ll once again be surrounded by immense grief, just as he was in Uvalde, Texas, and Buffalo, N.Y., less than a year ago.

    But he ended Tuesday’s remarks with a line of hope. It’s a piece of advice he’s shared with other survivors and family members along the way — something he draws from his own experiences with grief.

    “It takes time, but I promise you,” Biden said. “I promise you, the day will come when the memory of your loved one will bring a smile to your lips before it brings a tear to your eye.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Excise policy scam: Bizman Abhishek Boinpally moves Delhi HC for bail

    Excise policy scam: Bizman Abhishek Boinpally moves Delhi HC for bail

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    New Delhi: Hyderabad businessman Abhishek Boinpally on Tuesday moved the Delhi High Court against the trial court’s order denying him bail in the alleged Delhi excise policy scam case registered by the Enforcement Directorate (ED).

    Counsel representing Boinpally contended that his client is in custody since October 2022.

    The plea was, however, opposed by the ED saying that it lacks maintainability.

    A bench of Justice Dinesh Kumar Sharma posted the matter for the next hearing on April 20, after hearing the arguments.

    Boinpally was a Director of Anoos Electrolysis & Obesity Pvt. Ltd, Anoos Health & Wellness Pvt. Ltd., Robin Distribution LLP, Agasti Ventures, SS Mines & Minerals, Master Sand LLP, Neoverse Realty Pvt. Ltd., Zeus Networking Pvt. Ltd and Valuecare Esthetic Pvt. Ltd.

    On February 16, four others – Vijay Nair, Sarath Chandra Reddy, Sameer Mahendru and Benoy Babu – were also denied bail by Special Judge, Rouse Avenue Courts, M.K. Nagpal, who held that the method adopted by the five of them for committing the offences under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) makes up for sufficient incriminating evidence.

    As the ED has already made serious allegations of tampering evidence against them, the court had said that it will also be not possible to hold that the accused persons will not try to tamper with the evidence in the case if they are released on bail.

    “Keeping in view the totality of facts and circumstances and the above discussion, this court is of the considered opinion that none of the applicants/accused deserves to be released on bail in this case at this stage of proceedings as the allegations made against them are quite serious and relate to commission of an economic offence of money-laundering defined by Section 3 and made punishable by Section 4 of the PMLA. Hence, their bail applications are being dismissed,” the court had said.

    On Monday, the court also extended Hyderabad-based businessman Arun Ramchandra Pillai’s ED custody by three days in the case.

    He was arrested on March 6 after hours of questioning in the case.

    Judge Nagpal sent Pillai to ED custody on March 7, which expired on Monday.

    His arrest makes up for the 11th arrest made in the matter by the ED.

    The ED has alleged that Pillai was involved in forming a cartel (now called South Group) of manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers which controlled more than 30 per cent of the liquor business in the national capital.

    The central agency named the said cartel, South group, which includes BRS leader K. Kavitha, Sarath Reddy, the promoter of Aurobindo Pharma, YSRCP MP from Ongole, Magunta Srinivasulu Reddy, his son Raghav Magunta and others.

    The South group was represented by Pillai, Boinpally and Butchi Babu, the agency has claimed.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • BRS MP moves suspension notice in RS to discuss ‘abuse’ of central agencies by govt

    BRS MP moves suspension notice in RS to discuss ‘abuse’ of central agencies by govt

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    New Delhi: Bharata Rashtra Samithi (BRS) MP K. Keshav Rao today moved a notice under rule 267 for suspension of business in the Rajya Sabha to ‘abuse’ of central agencies like CBI and ED by the government.

    On the other hand, Lok Sabha Congress MP Manish Tewari has moved the notice on the issue of Chinese transgressions, and Manickam Tagore’s notice is on the issue of hike in LPG prices.

    In the Rajya Sabha the suspension notice was given on post-poll violence in Tripura by Binay Vishwam, CPl MP.

    Congress President and Leader of Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, Mallikarjun Kharge, who met Vice President and Rajya Sabha Chairman Jagdeep Dhankhar on Sunday ahead of the second part of the Budget Session, said that they want discussion on every burning issue.

    “We, as Opposition parties, are keen to play a constructive role in making the government accountable and would want discussion on every burning issue facing the nation,” he said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Congress moves against TikTok amid Biden administration ‘stalemate’

    Congress moves against TikTok amid Biden administration ‘stalemate’

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    The new legislation — co-sponsored by eleven other lawmakers, including six Democrats — underscores rising bipartisan impatience with Biden’s efforts to contain TikTok and deal with broader digital threats from China. With the administration’s own national security review of TikTok, which is being conducted by the the interagency Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., bogged down by internal disagreement, the White House quickly voiced its support for Warner’s bill Tuesday. The move signaled to lawmakers that any near-term action may have to come from Congress.

    “I am concerned that CFIUS has come to a stalemate situation,” said Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, the head Democrat on the House Select Committee on China, who has signed on to a separate bill to ban TikTok. “When you have a stalemate then you end up with the status quo, and the status quo is unacceptable.”

    “Clearly it’s a fraught subject for evaluation,” added Sen. Mitt Romney, a Republican sponsor of Warner’s bill, who said he hoped the “broad authorities” in the legislation would help the administration find a solution.

    Those lawmakers and other policymakers worry the Chinese government could get its hands on TikTok’s massive amounts of user data — including from more than 100 million American users. It’s a widespread concern: Congress, the European Union and a handful of states have all moved to prohibit the use of TikTok on government devices.

    In addition to Warner’s bill, Krishnamoorthi and his counterpart on the China Select Committee, Chair Mike Gallagher, have put forward a bill to ban the app outright. So has House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Michael McCaul. Negotiations continue between lawmakers on how to harmonize the bill as the legislative session continues.

    The White House also recognizes the risk, directing CFIUS to restart a national security review of the app early in the administration, after the Trump administration’s efforts to force a sale of the app ran aground in court. But that review has dragged on without resolution after months of debate between Treasury department officials and representatives of various national security agencies.

    The White House, which worked with Warner in drafting the bill, says that the CFIUS review of TikTok continues and declined to comment on any potential impasse. But a senior administration official also added that Warner’s legislation would help the administration evaluate TikTok and other foreign apps by “allowing us to take a comprehensive approach to these threats.”

    It’s not just the CFIUS review that remains up in the air. The impasse has delayed a separate Biden executive order on foreign data collection planned for over a year, and the administration still has not finished a separate Commerce Department rule on information and communications technology.

    Warner and his co-sponsors hope their legislation can help nudge the administration ahead on multiple fronts. The bill would give the Commerce Department new authority and processes to evaluate the national security risks of TikTok and other foreign-made apps and products. It’s designed to override a section of U.S. law, known as the Berman amendments, that previously derailed the Trump administration’s efforts to ban the app.

    “Regardless of what happens with TikTok, we need this stronger tool to go after foreign technology,” Warner said.

    But some Republican China hawks remain skeptical. Sen. Marco Rubio, the top Republican on the Intelligence Committee, said he opposed Warner’s bill because it only gave the administration new authority to regulate TikTok, rather than mandating an outright ban. He has signed on to Gallagher and Krishnamoorthi’s bill to prohibit the app in the U.S.

    “I don’t think the White House wants to do anything” about TikTok, said Rubio. “I support a ban.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • French surveillance system for Olympics moves forward, despite civil rights campaign

    French surveillance system for Olympics moves forward, despite civil rights campaign

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    PARIS — A controversial video surveillance system cleared a legislative hurdle Wednesday to be used during the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics amid opposition from left-leaning French politicians and digital rights NGOs, who argue it infringes upon privacy standards.

    The National Assembly’s law committee approved the system, but also voted to limit the temporary program’s duration until December 24, 2024, instead of June 2025. 

    The plan pitched by the French government includes experimental large-scale, real-time camera systems supported by an algorithm to spot suspicious behavior, including unsupervised luggage and alarming crowd movements like stampedes.  

    Earlier this week, civil society groups in France and beyond — including La Quadrature du Net, Access Now and Amnesty International — penned an op-ed in Le Monde raising concerns about what they argued was a “worrying precedent” that France could set in the EU. 

    There’s a risk that the measures, pitched as temporary, could become permanent, and they likely would not comply with the EU’s Artificial Intelligence Act, the groups also argue. 

    About 90 left-leaning lawmakers signed a petition initiated by La Quadrature du Net to scrap Article 7, which includes the AI-powered surveillance system. They failed, however, to gather enough votes to have it deleted from the bill. 

    Lawmakers also voted to ensure the general public is better informed of where the cameras are and to involve the cybersecurity agency ANSSI on top of the privacy regulator CNIL. They also widened the pool of images and data that can be used to train the algorithms ahead of the Olympics.

    The bill will go to a full plenary vote on March 21 for final approval.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Biden administration moves to block JetBlue’s $3.8B Spirit takeover

    Biden administration moves to block JetBlue’s $3.8B Spirit takeover

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    In an appearance Tuesday on CNN, Buttigieg acknowledged the unusual step his department is taking, saying DOT has “generally not gotten involved in these merger cases, but that’s changing today. It is so important to make sure that passengers have choices, that they have access to low fares and that they have access to competition, and yet we’ve seen less and less and less of that competition over the years.”

    “We’ve had a lot of authorities when it is comes to competition, but frankly over recent years the Department of Transportation hasn’t used those authorities very much. I think that it needs to change,” Buttigieg continued.

    In the lawsuit, DOJ says the merger, which will remove seats from every plane Spirit operates, would be especially harmful to “cost-conscious” travelers. “Fewer seats means fewer passengers — and higher prices for those who can still afford to make their way onto the plane,” the suit read.

    The dual moves open a new high-stakes opportunity for the Biden administration to make good on its pledge to boost competition across the economy. DOJ scored a key victory last fall in blocking the merger of publishing giants Penguin Random House and Simon and Schuster. However, it also lost challenges to a health care technology deal, a merger of two sugar producers and a deal between two national security contractors.

    “Threats to competition like those alleged here are particularly likely to harm working- and middle-class families, who may struggle to withstand the price increases that consolidation often brings,” Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said at press conference on Tuesday. “The department’s commitment to ensuring economic opportunity and fairness means holding those concerns in the front of our minds.”

    The lawsuit has been looming over the pending merger for months and has been expected since the companies inked their deal last June. The companies have pledged to defend the case in court, and while the lawsuit could take a year or more to play out, they have until the middle of next year to close the deal.

    JetBlue and Spirit have argued that their deal would increase rather than harm competition, and that it is necessary in order to compete with bigger rivals American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines. But those arguments ultimately were not convincing enough to avoid a lawsuit.

    In its suit, DOJ argued that the merger would “stop future competition before it starts,” noting that it could significantly curtail competition on several routes. It also said the merger will remove an important check against “coordinated behavior by eliminating Spirit’s aggressive, disruptive business model from the marketplace and by placing all of Spirit’s planes and crews under JetBlue’s control.”

    Last year, Spirit attempted to merge with fellow low-cost carrier Frontier but failed to drum up enough shareholder support for the deal. In the complaint, DOJ noted that aviation and economic consultants hired by Spirit warned against the transaction and included an image of a slide that Spirit presented to shareholders warning against a potential Spirit-JetBlue merger.

    While there are other ultra low cost carriers in the market, they won’t be able to fill Spirit’s void. Allegiant and Frontier’s limited frequency “makes it difficult for them to gain traction in new markets, which in turn limits their ability to effectively compete,” the DOJ wrote in its complaint.

    JetBlue was also in the early stages of competing with Spirit’s business model, which the suit highlights. “The new unbundled ‘Blue Basic’ fare gave customers greater choices for which features they wanted to pay JetBlue. This allowed JetBlue to compete more effectively with Spirit for ‘[h]ighly price-conscious travelers … [who had shown] they [were] willing to give up some of the experience for the lowest fares possible,’” the suit read.

    In an attempt to address DOJ’s concerns, JetBlue had offered to sell off the entirety of Spirit’s operations at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey, New York’s LaGuardia Airport and Boston Logan International Airport in Massachusetts, as well as several slots at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Florida.

    Not on the table was an offer to abandon JetBlue’s Northeast Alliance with American Airlines, which allows the two airlines to largely combine operations at several major Northeast airports, which the DOJ challenged in court last year and is awaiting a ruling from a federal judge in Boston.

    However, while the DOJ is concerned about the airlines’ overlapping routes in multiple markets, there was no amount of divestitures that would have made the department comfortable with the deal, according to a person with knowledge of the DOJ’s thinking.

    The DOJ challenged the American partnership as a de facto merger in the Northeast market and in combination with the Spirit deal, sees it as essentially a three-way merger on those routes.

    According to the complaint, which cites the companies’ internal documents, when Spirit enters a new market, or city pair, prices drop on average 17 percent across all airlines, and when it leaves a market, prices jump an average of 30 percent.

    In a statement released on Monday, JetBlue said it is three times more effective in lowering fares than Spirit when it enters a new market.

    The airlines maintain that despite flying planes with fewer seats, they will not have to raise fares. When asked for details about how the merger could drive down prices, JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes said in a recent interview with POLITICO that customers would still save because planes in the new, combined airline will spend more time in the air and less time on the ground.

    “One of the benefits of bringing these two airlines together is we can increase the utilization of the airline,” Hayes said. “You have more options to fly that next route to increase the length of time in the day that you’re flying.”

    In the same interview Spirit CEO Ted Christie acknowledged that fares on some routes could increase if the merger is approved. But he argued that the new airline would lead to decreased fare costs overall.

    On Monday, Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody reached a settlement with the two airlines, including a commitment to bring new flights and jobs to the state.

    Mia McCarthy contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )