Southwest to launch new service from Long Beach to Oakland - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Southwest to launch new service from Long Beach to Oakland

Share via

The newest carrier at Long Beach Airport plans to start its service with routes to the Bay Area.

Southwest Airlines, which was awarded four slots to operate out of the 1,166-acre facility, announced Thursday its plans to start four daily flights to Oakland International Airport on June 5.

See the most-read stories this hour >>

Advertisement

Southwest gained access to Long Beach when the city conducted a noise study that found the airport could add nine new daily departures and arrivals — a 20% expansion of traffic — without exceeding the city’s noise restrictions.

The city awarded four of those slots to Southwest, three to JetBlue Airways and two to Delta Air Lines. JetBlue and Delta already fly out of Long Beach. Industry experts say the move opened the door for Southwest to go head-to-head with JetBlue, which has dominated traffic at the regional airport.

JetBlue now flies three daily flights from Long Beach to Oakland, as well as three to San Francisco International Airport, according to the airport’s latest flight schedule.

Advertisement

In announcing the new service, Southwest officials seemed to take shots at their competitors at the airport. Southwest noted that it doesn’t charge passengers to check their first two bags, while other airlines waive the fee only for certain routes or under special circumstances.

“As we bring much-needed competition to Long Beach this summer, our aim continues to be offering Californians the best value in air service,†said Andrew Watterson, Southwest Airlines’ senior vice president of network and revenue.

To read more about travel, tourism and the airline industry, follow Hugo Martin on Twitter at @hugomartin.

Advertisement

SIGN UP for the free California Inc. business newsletter >>

ALSO

Amazon to open a new fulfillment center in San Bernardino

Tesla Model 3: ‘People believe in Elon Musk’s dream’

FCC votes to make low-income Americans eligible for subsidy for high-speed Internet service

Advertisement