Tag: Spirit

  • The Spirit of Place 2021 Calendar

    The Spirit of Place 2021 Calendar


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    Publisher ‏ : ‎ Sellers Pub Inc (1 September 2020)
    Language ‏ : ‎ English
    Calendar ‏ : ‎ 24 pages
    ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1531911463
    ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1531911461
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 99 g
    Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 17.78 x 17.78 x 0.48 cm

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    #Spirit #Place #Calendar

  • Fire Service Week: Fire Safety Norms Should Be Followed In Letter And Spirit

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    SRINAGAR: People should be aware of fire safety measures and follow those in letter and spirit to control situations during fire incidents, said Towseef Hussain, Assistant Director of Fire and Emergency Services Budgam.

    Talking on the sidelines of an event marking the culmination of the Fire Service Week, the officer said, “To control the situation and minimise losses during fire incidents, the most important thing is educating people about fire safety precautions. They should also strictly adhere to the instructions.”

    The programme was aimed at raising awareness among the public regarding fire safety measures. Students and employees also participated in the event which included various competitions.

    The J&K Fire and Emergency Department organised Fire Safety Week, which began on April 14, to commemorate the firefighters who lost their lives in the line of duty.

    In the programme AGNI (Awareness in Fire Safety for Growth of National Infrastructure), students from various schools across Budgam participated in essay writing and lecture competitions. The top three winners received cash prizes and certificates, while all participants received medals and appreciation for their participation.

    Senior officers facilitated the employees of the Fire & Emergency Department who were present at the event. (KNO)

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    #Fire #Service #Week #Fire #Safety #Norms #Letter #Spirit

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • 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 )

  • DOJ to file suit blocking JetBlue’s takeover of Spirit

    DOJ to file suit blocking JetBlue’s takeover of Spirit

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    The lawsuit, which has been looming over the pending merger for months, could delay the deal by well over a year. The companies have until early next year to close the deal, which is aimed at creating the nation’s fifth-largest airline in an industry dominated by Delta, American, Southwest and United.

    In an interview with POLITICO in late February, JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes and Spirit CEO Ted Christie both argued that the deal would mean lower prices for people who want to fly. But the Justice Department, which has been investigating the proposed merger since summer, was unconvinced that removing ultra-low-cost carrier Spirit from the market would not cause fares to rise.

    When asked for details about how the merger could drive down prices, Hayes said fares are a “function of capacity” and that Spirit flights would adopt JetBlue’s seat configuration. Though that means fewer seats, he argued that customers would still save because planes in the new, combined airline would spend more time in the air and less time on the ground.

    The suit comes at a time of immense upheaval for the airline industry, including the December debacle in which Southwest Airlines canceled more than 16,000 flights during the Christmas holidays. That episode helped stoke anger from consumers and regulators, amid complaints that decades of mergers have left passengers at the mercy of a monolithic airline industry.

    Federal antitrust regulators have taken a harder line against a range of powerful businesses under President Joe Biden, including a recent DOJ lawsuit aimed at breaking up Google’s advertising business and the Federal Trade Commission’s unsuccessful attempt to stop Facebook’s parent from buying a fitness app.

    JetBlue’s and Spirit’s argument before DOJ is essentially that they must merge in order to compete with the big four legacy airlines.

    To address DOJ’s concerns, JetBlue has 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 five 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 the DOJ challenged in court last year and is awaiting a ruling from a federal judge in Boston.

    Now JetBlue has a second DOJ antitrust case to contend with.

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    #DOJ #file #suit #blocking #JetBlues #takeover #Spirit
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • JetBlue, Spirit push low fare merger narrative to skeptical DOJ

    JetBlue, Spirit push low fare merger narrative to skeptical DOJ

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    When asked for details about how the merger could drive down prices, Hayes said fares are a “function of capacity” and that Spirit flights will adopt JetBlue’s seat configuration. Though that means fewer seats, he argued 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.”

    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.

    Fares are “based on booking patterns happening at that particular time. So you could probably derive individual circumstances where you may see modest changes in fare,” Christie said. “But what’s more important to focus on is the aggregate effect of the larger airline,” he said. “I think hundreds of millions of dollars will be saved.”

    However, because the combined airline will ultimately end up removing seats, Justice Department officials are not convinced that the new company won’t be forced to raise prices to recoup those losses, people with knowledge of the matter said.

    DOJ’s decision coming soon

    DOJ has a little more than a week to make a final call on whether to sue. The parties had previously agreed on a deadline of Feb. 28, but one of the people familiar with the matter now says that date is expected to slip. Hayes on Thursday also noted that those agreements can always be extended.

    He added that JetBlue has been in discussions “with a number of state [attorneys general] as well.” And he also said that there will be “over the next week or two, a very significant amount of political bipartisan support for this transaction.” Hayes declined to comment on any specific meetings with the DOJ.

    The companies’ argument before DOJ is essentially that they must merge in order to compete with the big four legacy airlines, Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines. Once merged, the new entity would be the fifth biggest, behind that group.

    DOJ antitrust head Jonathan Kanter, who has an aggressive mandate to fight corporate deal-making, is unlikely to buy that argument.

    Kanter however has recused himself from the case because his former law firm, Paul Weiss, represents Spirit, according to one of the people. That would leave the decision in the hands of his deputy, Doha Mekki, and practically it would have little impact.

    A DOJ spokesperson did not immediately respond for comment.

    Hayes has said several times in the past two weeks that the companies intend to fight for their deal in court, if necessary.

    Airlines’ offer to grease the skids

    To address DOJ’s concerns, JetBlue has offered to sell off the entirety of Spirit’s operations at Newark Liberty International Airport, LaGuardia Airport and Boston Logan International Airport, as well as five slots at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.

    Those were picked amid DOJ concerns that JetBlue’s Northeast Alliance with American Airlines reduces competition and consumer choice, said JetBlue Senior Vice President of Government Affairs Robert Land.

    Land said the companies are in “advanced” talks with potential buyers for all the assets up for sale, adding that the four largest airlines are not part of the divestiture talks.

    Not currently on the table is an offer to abandon the alliance, which the DOJ challenged in court last year and is currently awaiting a ruling from a federal judge in Boston.

    “Let’s wait and see what the judge’s verdict is. If we lose the NEA, right, the NEA is off the table,” Hayes said, “If we win the NEA, we won the NEA because it’s pro-competition. Frankly, we can use a number of slots leased to us by American to help JetBlue be bigger.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )