Cessna sees spike in piston aircraft sales

Cessna Aircraft officials report this week that they’ve seen a spike in piston aircraft sales over the past two months. They credit the increases to sales programs the company has put in place and to tax incentives that are set to expire at the end of the year.

That’s a positive development, officials said.

Through bonus depreciation, business-related aircraft acquisitions may qualify for accelerated depreciation under a provision in the federal stimulus package passed earlier this year.

Cessna also has extended two of its sales program through the end of the year.

One is a “Deal of the Decade” program that gives buyers a $10,000 fuel card and free synthetic vision technology for certain Corvalis models.  A “Deposit Amplifier” program adds $30,000 to a deposit for a new Cessna 182 or T182 Skylane and a choice of one of three technology upgrades for the Garmin G1000 technology package.

Hawker Beechcraft makes airbags, enhanced vision systems available

Airbags aren’t just for autos anymore. Hawker Beechcraft is making seatbelt airbags for the pilot and co-pilot seats on its Baron and Bonanza aircraft available. The company also introduced with enhanced vision systems for the two models this week.

The airbags are integrated into the lap belt portion of the seatbelt. They inflate in less than 90 milliseconds, the company says. And unlike automotive airbags, they safely deploy up and away from the occupant, “making it a safe restraint for passengers of all ages,” the company says. Hawker Beechcraft’s parts and distribution organization has begun taking orders for the bags.

The enhanced vision systems, the EVS-100 and EVS-600, commonly known as infrared or thermal imaging cameras, help penetrate haze, fog, smoke and precipitation. . They help pilots see unlit obstacles during taxi and takeoff and help them avoid clouds, fly between layers and note detailed ground features out of the night landscape in flight.

Afraid to fly? There’s an app for that

If you’re afraid of flying,  help is an app away.  Virgin Atlantic Airways has tailored its Flying Without Fear course for the iPhone and iPod Touch devices.

The app is based on Virgin Atlantic’s course designed to help people to overcome their fear of flying. It gives its  success rate as 98 percent.

Fears can range from anxiety at takeoff to a complete inability to board an aircraft, the airline said.

Features include an video introduction by Virgin Atlantic’s Sir Richard Branson, explains flight from start to finish, answers common questions and gives relaxation and fear therapy. It also has a “fear attack button” that gives breathing exercises and quick tips.

The app was developed in partnership between the airline and Mental Workout, a company that designs, develops, and markets mobile applications to help people resolve issues and increase mental performance.

Boeing says why talks broke down with the union; union responds

Boeing officials sent out a memo yesterday saying why its discussions with its Machinists union were unsuccessful. Last week, the company announced it would move a second 787 assembly line to South Carolina. The Machinists sent out a memo in response. I’ve posted both memos here.

***This message is being sent from Ray Conner, Commercial Airplanes vice president of Supply Chain Management and Operations, and Doug Kight, Commercial Airplanes vice president of Human Resources, to all Commercial Airplanes managers and HR employees.***

Why our discussions with the IAM were unsuccessful

You have undoubtedly heard the many reactions and opinions of people weighing in on our decision to expand our 787 production capacity to Boeing Charleston. Not everything you read or hear is accurate, and that’s why we feel it’s important to share information to help your teams sort through the many perspectives.

We’d like to emphasize that Boeing considered many complex factors in this decision. Working with the union to achieve our objectives of production stability and long-term cost competitiveness was one of those factors.

We personally participated in the dialogue with the International Association of Machinists, starting in the summer. We held talks over many weeks with both IAM international and local representatives. The talks were constructive and all participants were engaged in a good-faith effort to address the issues. During these discussions we very clearly laid out our objectives and our need to have the union’s best offer for an agreement by mid-October to enable us to prepare a recommendation for the Oct. 26 meeting of Boeing’s board of directors. The IAM gave us that final proposal on Wed., Oct. 21.

Unfortunately, that offer fell short of what would have been needed for Boeing management to recommend to the board that the second 787 line be put in Everett, Wash. The union:

  • Offered to extend the current contract eight years to 2020.
  • Included annual general wage increases of 3 percent on top of an annual cost-of-living adjustment that has added more than 1 percent a year for the last 20 years.
  • Required three lump-sum bonuses of $5,000 or 10 percent of earnings, whichever is greater, in 2009, 2013 and 2016.
  • Included an annual pension increase of $2.50 per month for the life of the agreement, taking the pension to $103.50 by 2020.
  • Demanded that Boeing promise to be neutral on all IAM organizing and decertification campaigns anywhere in the country.
  • Required that Boeing guarantee to put future airplane programs in the Puget Sound region far into the future.
  • Agreed to share medical cost increases, but deferred that sharing until 2018.

We told the IAM that we wouldn’t be able to make commitments on future airplanes so far into the future. And we couldn’t agree to blanket neutrality on international IAM campaigns that had nothing to do with our Puget Sound work force. Both issues were identified early as roadblocks to moving forward.

We stated that we needed an extension of at least 10 years to the current contract. We offered annual wage increases of 2 percent, a bit higher than the average increase that our IAM-represented employees have gained over the last 30 years. We offered annual pension increases at the same rate. We offered to introduce an annual incentive plan that could have boosted income annually for our employees.

In the end, we told the IAM clearly and repeatedly that their offer did not meet the objectives we had set out for a proposal to the board of directors. We asked them if they were sure that this was the best they could do on a range of issues, and they said it was. We gave them an ample, fair opportunity for discussion throughout this process, and the union was unwavering in its positions on key issues. That’s why we declined to participate in their request for 11th-hour talks.

On the positive side, we shared a lot of information with the union about the intense global competition we face, our business environment and our business issues. The union agreed to a framework on sharing future medical cost increases. We developed an approach to an incentive pay plan that would reward employees for achieving annual targets in the areas of cost, quality and productivity. We had good, constructive dialogue on a range of important issues, and we hope to build from there in regular meetings with union leadership. We remain committed to improving our relationship with the IAM.

When all is said and done, we believe that we are in the midst of one of the most exciting, dynamic times for commercial aviation. And the Puget Sound region is the hub for aerospace talent. We solve incredibly challenging technical problems every day and we work together to get the job done. Puget Sound and Charleston combined are a great engine for growth and a successful future for us all.

Message from District President Tom Wroblewski to 751 Members in Response to Doug Kight’s 10/29/09 Memo

October 29, 2009 – “I’d like to respond to Doug Kight’s e-mail to managers explaining what he says were the stumbling blocks that kept us from reaching an agreement to keep the second 787 line in Everett. It’s misleading, it’s disappointing and it’s not truthful.

Boeing would not commit to any agreement to keep the second line in Everett. That, and only that, is the reason why our conversations went nowhere.

The proposals Boeing e-mailed today were more detailed than anything we heard from the Company during three weeks of face-to-face conversations. They threw a lot of numbers around while we were talking together, but they were never willing to put them in writing. If they’d been this willing to put numbers in writing a week ago, we might have got somewhere.

We presented them with an initial verbal proposal. They never responded to that first proposal in writing, and never told us what they wanted to see in an agreement — and absolutely never told us there was a deadline for submitting revised offers. Instead, we found out the hard way that they’d set an arbitrary deadline; when it passed, they just walked away. They’ve set a lot of unrealistic deadlines with the 787. This was just one more.

The discussions we had with them were like trying to build a foundation for an agreement on the shifting sands of the desert. As soon as we got close to an agreement in one area, the Company would change the subject. We never exchanged formal written proposals– and we never got a guarantee for the second line.

Aside from being misleading, the tone of this e-mail was disappointing too. I see no value in going back and rehashing this. It serves no purpose. They got what they wanted from South Carolina. It’s time to move on.

This latest Company e-mail is just another smoke-and-mirror tactic trying to confuse the situation. Boeing executives had made their decision long before they ever sat down to talk with us. They’re breaking ground in Charleston in two weeks and planning deliveries for 2012, both clear signs this was their plan all along.

The simple truth is there won’t be any new jobs in South Carolina if our Members here in Puget Sound can’t find solutions for all the 787’s problems. We’re the ones who will fix the mistakes and get the first planes ready to fly, and we’re the ones who will be building 787s on two lines in Everett – the main line and the new surge line — while they’re still filling in swamp land in Charleston.

Without us, the Dreamliner is just a pipedream. Let’s focus on making it a reality, and quit stewing and fretting about who said what and when.”

Airbus North America in Wichita waits approval for additional work

Airbus North America in Old Town is waiting to hear whether it will win additional work for its Wichita engineering center.

The proposal has been presented.

“We’re waiting approval and going through the process,” said Bill Greer, head of the Wichita site.

He expects to know by the first week in December.

Last month, the Wichita City Council voted to sell the former Kansas Sports Hall of Fame building at 238 N. Mead for $1.43 million to Dave Burk’s Marketplace Properties to make room for the additional Airbus work.

The deal is contingent on a lease with Airbus, which wants to create 100 engineering jobs over three years to study repair and maintenance of its aircraft.  Burk is already the landlord for Airbus at its current site at 213 N. Mead.

Business jet flight activity rose in September

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Business jet flight activity was up in September, a good sign for the business jet market. Business jet activity is a key indicator of the market.

Takeoffs and landings, considered a “cycle,” were 18 percent higher in September than in March, when they hit a low, according to a just-released report from UBS Securities.

September’s increase was the fifth uptick in the past six months, the report said.

They still, however, were 9 percent lower than a year ago, and 27 percent lower from their peak in mid-2007.

Activity for short-range aircraft, which declined the most in the downturn, showed the largest increase, according to UBS.

But don’t get ready to pop the champagne cork yet.

“We still think the business jet market is characterized by significant oversupply, weak pricing and tight financing,” the report said. “While our key indicators point to a market that is stabilizing at lower levels, we still see risk of an extended downturn.”

Ninety-Nines to celebrate 80th anniversary with local reception

The Kansas Chapter of The Ninety-Nines is celebrating the 80th anniversary of the founding of the international organization of women pilots.

The local chapter is hosting a reception from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on  Monday, Nov. 2 at Hangar One on the second floor.

The Ninety-Nines was founded in 1929 and named for the group’s first 99 charter members.  Its first president was aviatrix Amelia Earhart.

Machinists counter Boeing’s strike concerns

The Machinists union say suggestions by Boeing that its decision to build a new 787 assembly line in South Carolina are based on concerns about future strikes by the union are false.

“Corporate decisions like this are years in the making, and this one is no different,” Machinists international president Tom Buffenbarger said in a statement. “Until the last minute, executives feign indecision in an effort to dodge responsibility and to squeeze the last drops of goodwill out of a community that is losing a part of its legacy, and more important, its employment base.”

According to the Seattle P-I, the union offered Boeing a 10-year, no strike-deal and was willing to discuss a longer-term agreement to get Boeing to commit to putting the second line in Everett, Wash.

Will Boeing’s announcement help S.C. governor stay in office?

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford immediately issued a statement yesterday following Boeing’s decision to put a second  787 assembly line in his state. Sanford hailed the move as the biggest economic development effort in South Carolina’s history.

I wonder whether the coup will help save Sanford’s political career.

Talk of his impeachment began last summer after it came to light that he had secretly spent  five-days in Argentina with his girlfriend. When he returned, he admitted to a year-long extramarital affair.

I wonder whether the Boeing win will temper the impeachment sentiment.

Spirit AeroSystems officially opens Malaysian aerospace facility

WICHITA: Spirit AeroSystems officially opened its aerospace manufacturing and design facility in Malaysia today.

Eventually, the facility is expected to employ more than 450 people in assembly, manufacturing, engineering, commercial and support roles.

The 242,000 square-foot plant will initially produce composite subassemblies for Airbus single-aisle aircraft. It also will perform design engineering developing assemblies for the Airbus A350 XWB.

The Malaysian prime minister is to officiate at an opening ceremony for the facility today. The project has received support from the Malaysian Industrial Development Authority, Malaysian Industry-Government Group for High Technology and Malaysia Airports Holdings Berhad.