Air Transportation Stabilization Board Explained

The Air Transportation Stabilization Board (ATSB) is an office of United States Department of the Treasury created to assist US airlines in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The Air Transportation Safety and System Stabilization Act, signed into law September 22, 2001, authorizes the board to issue up to $10 billion in federal loan guarantees to air carriers for which credit is not otherwise available and where "such agreement is a necessary part of maintaining a safe, efficient and viable commercial aviation system in the United States."[1]

Loan guarantees

Between 2001 and 2003, the ATSB approved applications for loan guarantees from seven carriers: America West Airlines, US Airways, American Trans Air, Aloha Airlines, Frontier Airlines, Evergreen International Airlines, and World Airways. These carriers accepted loan guarantees worth $1.179 billion. Ultimately, the government benefited from the program, drawing $300 million in profit.[2]

The ATSB denied applications from nine carriers: Ozark Airlines dba Great Plains Airlines, MEDjet International, Corporate Airlines, Gemini Air Cargo, Frontier Flying Service, Spirit Airlines, National Airlines, and both initial and revised applications from United Airlines and Vanguard Airlines.

ATSB Results

Successes

Still in Business and holding on in life support

Casualties

References

  1. ATSB Loan Guarantees,Web site: U.S. Treasury - Air Transportation Stabilization Board - Loan Guarantees . 2008-02-26 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080220134114/http://www.treas.gov/offices/domestic-finance/atsb/loan-guarantees.shtml . 2008-02-20 .
  2. Web site: May 2006 . A Painful Lesson in Politics . public.alpa.org.

External links