Miami Air International

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Miami Air International
200px
IATA ICAO Callsign
LL BSK BISCAYNE
Founded August 1990[1]
Commenced operations October 1991[1]
Hubs Miami International Airport
Fleet size 6
Parent company TSI Holding Company
Headquarters Miami-Dade County, Florida, USA
Key people James Proia, C.E.O.
Ross Fischer. Chairman
Website www.miamiair.com

Miami Air International is an American charter airline based in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States.[2][3] It operates worldwide passenger charter flights for diverse groups including cruise operators, professional sports teams and the United States military. It is based in Miami International Airport.[4]

Miami Air's customers include incentive groups, sports teams, Fortune 500 companies, major cruise lines, entertainers, political candidates and the United States government. Under the Civil Reserve Air Fleet (CRAF) program, Miami Air is contracted by the United States Air Force Air Mobility Command (USAF AMC) for transporting troops and cargo.[5]

History

The airline was established in August 1990 and started operations in October 1991 using Boeing 727-200 aircraft on lease from Xerox Credit Corporation.

George Lyall who had a long career at Eastern Air Lines and Pan Am World Airways was Chairman and Ross Fischer who had run System Operations at People Express and Eastern was President. These executives were the primary shareholders and founders, which also included a variety of former Eastern personnel, a former "Big 8" partner with extensive industry audit experience, an upcoming Miami lawyer and several former People Express operations personnel. By 2000, the company had grown to 8 owned Boeing 727 aircraft and revenues in excess of $100 million.

That year, a consortium led by Eagle Global Logistics purchased a majority stake in the company, primarily from retiring shareholders and embarked on converting the company's Boeing 727s to cargo aircraft to operate its cargo hub in Austin, Texas under the Quest International name. Simultaneously, new Boeing 737-800s were leased to provide the passenger service of the converted Boeing 727s. In 2001, the events of September 11th and the awarding of the postal contract to FedEx Express caused lease rates and values of Boeing 727s to plummet and in early 2002 EGL stopped utilizing Quest cargo aircraft and they were sold off.

Meanwhile, in large part due to the huge jump in military business, Miami Air's passenger business thrived and the company grew to 8 Boeing 737-800s and 2 passenger Boeing 727s by 2005. At that time one of the existing shareholders (TSI Holding Company) expressed a desire to purchase the entire company and bought out the other EGL consortium and remaining original shareholders.

At the present time, Miami Air International with its Boeing 737-800s remains an ad hoc charterer with a wide customer base. The military, sport teams, cruise lines, tour operators and incentive groups are the main customers. Its Boeing 737-400s which are in first class configuration are devoted mainly to professional sports teams in hockey, baseball and basketball. Its operations are worldwide covering every continent except Antarctica.

The IATA code has been changed from GL to LL due to Air Greenland use of the same code. Air Greenland was the first one to use the code.

Miami Air International is wholly owned by TSI Holdings and has 405 employees (at March 2007).[4]

Fleet

A 737-800 at Manhattan Regional Airport for a military charter.
Miami Air International Boeing 737-400

As of May 2015, the Miami Air International fleet consists of the following aircraft:[6]

Miami Air International fleet
Aircraft In Service Passengers
(Business/Economy)
Boeing 737-400 2
68C
Boeing 737-800 4
168Y
Total 6

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. "Contact Us." Miami Air International. Retrieved on February 9, 2012. "Corporate address: Miami Air International, Inc. 5000 NW 36th Street, Suite 307 Miami, FL 33122"
  3. "Zoning Map." City of Hialeah. Retrieved on May 27, 2009.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Civil Reserve Air Fleet January 2007
  6. Miami Air International fleet list at planespotters.net retrieved 12 May 2015

External links