Janet (airline) explained

Airline:Janet
Icao:WWW
Callsign:JANET
Commenced:
Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Hubs:Harry Reid International Airport
Focus Cities:
Fleet Size:11
Destinations:6
Parent:Department of the Air Force
Headquarters:Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.

Janet and Janet Airlines are unofficial names of a highly classified fleet of passenger aircraft operated for the United States Department of the Air Force[1] as an employee shuttle to transport military, DoD civilians, and contractor employees to Special Access Program Facilities (SAPF). The airline mainly serves the Nevada Test and Training Range (most notably Area 51 and the Tonopah Test Range) from a private terminal at Las Vegas's Harry Reid International Airport.[2]

The airline's aircraft are generally unmarked aside from a red cheatline along the aircraft's windows.

History

The fleet's "Janet" call sign is said to stand for "Just Another Non-Existent Terminal"[3] [4] or "Joint Air Network for Employee Transportation".[5]

The first flights from Las Vegas to Area 51 were performed in 1972 by a Douglas DC-6 operated by EG&G. A second DC-6 was added in 1976 and this type remained in use until 1981. Boeing 737-200s were gradually added in that same decade, which were later supplemented by Air Force T-43s de-modified to conventional transport configurations.[6] [7]

After the October 2017 Las Vegas shooting massacre, news surfaced that the shooter, in addition to firing at concertgoers, had also targeted aviation fuel tanks at nearby Harry Reid International Airport (still McCarran International Airport). Further reporting by the New York Post suggested a possible connection between the vulnerable fuel tanks and a classified Janet operation.[8]

As of November 2023, the U.S. Air Force is looking for a new civilian contractor to operate the Janet fleet. In a solicitation, they outline that a potential new operator would have to operate up to 190 flights per week.[9]

Operations

Due to the airline's secretive nature, little is known about its organization. It is presently operated for the USAF by infrastructure and defense contractor Amentum through the company's acquisition of AECOM's defense contracting ventures. Originally the service was operated by EG&G, and later URS Corporation; this is mainly known as a result of periodic job openings published by URS and AECOM.[10] For example, in 2010, URS announced it would be hiring Boeing 737 flight attendants to be based in Las Vegas, requiring applicants to undergo a Single Scope Background Investigation in order to be able to obtain a security clearance.[11] [12]

Due to its secrecy, Janet airlines boards at a standalone terminal on the west side of Harry Reid International Airport.[13]

Janet flights operate with a three-digit flight number and a WWW-prefix.[14] In the official publication of ICAO airline codes, this specific three-letter designator is listed as being blocked.[15] The primary airline callsign is simply "Janet," though flights transition to alternate callsigns, called Groom Callsigns once transferred over to Groom Lake from Nellis control. The name typically changes, and the number will be the last 2 digits of the flight number +15. For example, if the callsign were Janet 412 and were transferred to Groom Lake control, the callsign would be something like "Bunny 27".

Destination codes

Due to its secrecy, Janet Airlines uses special codes for its destinations. KTKM is not an ICAO code for an airport, but for Area 51. Not all codes are known, but the following are listed:

AirportCode
U.S. Air Force Production Flight Test Installation (Plant 42)Station 1
Area 51Station 3
Basecamp Station 6
Tonopah Test RangeStation 7
Janet Terminal (Harry Reid International Airport)Station 9

Destinations

Janet destinations, mostly military, include:[16]

Janet Airlines destinations
CountryStateCityAirportAirport codesNotesRefs
IATA codeICAO codeFAA LID
CaliforniaPalmdalePMDKPMDPMDAlso known as Palmdale Regional Airport, as they share the same runway.
China LakeNaval Air Weapons Station China LakeKNIDNID
EdwardsEdwards Air Force BaseEDWKEDWEDWJanet Airlines services the north base.
NevadaGroom LakeHomey Airport - KXTA - More commonly known as Area 51.
Las VegasHarry Reid International AirportLASKLASLAS
TonopahTonopah Test RangeXSDKTNXTNX

Along with these destinations, there have been reports of Janet Airlines filing flight plans to many other airports.[17]

Fleet

the Janet fleet[18] consists of six Boeing 737-600s painted white with a prominent red cheatline. The fleet is registered to the Department of the Air Force, while some earlier aircraft were registered to several civil aircraft leasing corporations. Before the arrival of the 737-600s, Janet operated Boeing 737-200s, some of which were modified from military T-43A aircraft. One of the 737-200s with registration N5177C in the 1980s was briefly based in Germany at Frankfurt International Airport (which was at the time also home to a USAF base, Rhein-Main Air Base), and operated by Keyway Air Transport, apparently a front company for a US government operation. It was retired on 6 March 2009. Together with the other 737-200s, it was sent to AMARG at Davis–Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona for storage.[19]

All Janet 737-600 aircraft were acquired from Air China, and four were previously operated by the now-defunct China Southwest Airlines before being acquired for US Air Force operations starting in 2008. The aircraft were initially taken to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base before being transferred to Las Vegas.[20]

One aircraft, a Beechcraft 1900, was lost on 16 March 2004, when it crashed on approach for Tonopah Test Range Airport after the pilot suffered sudden cardiac arrest. Five people, including the pilot, were killed in the accident.[21] [22]

Current Janet Airlines fleet
TypeSerial numberTail numberC/NOwnerNotesRefs
Boeing 737-66N28649N319BD887United States Department of the Air Force[23] [24]
Boeing 737-66N28650N869HH932United States Department of the Air Force
Boeing 737-66N28652N859WP938United States Department of the Air Force
Boeing 737-66N29890N273RH1276United States Department of the Air Force
Boeing 737-66N29891N365SR1294United States Department of the Air Force
Boeing 737-66N29892N288DP1305United States Department of the Air Force
Beechcraft B200CBL-54N654BA - United States Department of the Air Force
Beechcraft B200CBL-61N661BA - United States Department of the Air Force
Beechcraft B200CBL-62N662BA - United States Department of the Air Force
Beechcraft B300CBL-63N989RRUnited States Department of the Air Force
Beechcraft B300CBL-64N910CBUnited States Department of the Air Force
Former Janet Airlines fleet
TypeSerial numberTail numberC/NOwnerFateRetiredRefs
Beechcraft 1900CUB-37N27RA - United States Department of the Air ForceCrash16 March 2004[25]
Boeing 737-27520785N4529W335United States Department of the Air ForceRetired7 November 2008
Boeing 737-25320694N5294M343United States Department of the Air ForceRetired26 January 2009
Boeing 737-25320693N5177C340United States Department of the Air ForceRetired6 March 2009
Boeing 737-25320691N5294E337United States Department of the Air ForceRetired17 April 2009
Boeing 737-25320692N5176Y339United States Department of the Air ForceRetired17 July 2009
Boeing 737-25320689N5175U334United States Department of the Air ForceRetired10 August 2009
Douglas DC-6BS60A-3079N6583C - EG&GRetiredOctober 1981

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: N5177C (1974 BOEING 737-200 owned by DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE) Aircraft Registration ✈ FlightAware. FlightAware.
  2. Web site: Janet Airline / EG&G . 21 September 2010 .
  3. Web site: Audio Clips of Janet Radio Traffic . 1 November 2010 .
  4. Area 51 Revealed. UFO Hunters. Presenters: Bill Birnes, Kevin Cook and Pat Uskert. History Channel. 25 February 2009.
  5. News: The secret airline run by the US government is hiring — and to get the job, you have to share your drinking habits, sexual behavior, and mental health. 8 January 2018. Rachel. Gillett. Business Insider. 24 September 2019.
  6. Web site: Hanson . Dana . Who Is the Mysterious Company "Janet Airlines?" . Money Inc . 7 October 2021 . 16 January 2023 .
  7. Web site: Brady . Chris . The T-43A . The Boeing 737 Technical Site . 28 November 2020 . 16 January 2023.
  8. News: Vegas maniac may have targeted classified government-run airline's fuel tanks. Fears. Danika. 5 October 2017. New York Post. 29 December 2017.
  9. News: Everstine . Brian . 2023-11-07 . U.S. Air Force Looking For New 'Janet' Operator . . 2023-11-10.
  10. Web site: The Janet Fleet . 21 September 2010.
  11. http://contractflygirl.blogspot.com/2010/05/egg-aka-janet-las-vegas.html Contractflygirl.blogspot.com – archived copy of URS Corporation job opening
  12. https://web.archive.org/web/20180108110557/https://aecom.jobs/las-vegas-nv/flight-attendant/5D866F71AE144CCEA994190F7DBB7674/job/ Archive.org – Archived copy of AECOM Corporation job opening
  13. Web site: Map and Aerial Photo of the Las Vegas Janet Terminal . dreamlandresort.com . Dreamland Resort . 26 February 2019 . 12 April 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190412044257/http://www.dreamlandresort.com/info/janet_map.html . dead .
  14. http://www.flightaware.com/live/flight/WWW224 Flightaware.com – WWW224
  15. ICAO Document 8585, Section 3: Three-Letter Designators.
  16. Web site: Janet Schedule & Destinations . www.dreamlandresort.com . Dreamland Resort . 3 October 2010.
  17. Web site: Janet Flight Schedules . dreamlandresort.com . Dreamland Resort . https://web.archive.org/web/20070404141825/http://www.dreamlandresort.com/info/janet_schedule.html . 4 March 2019. 4 April 2007 .
  18. Web site: Krum. Collin. America's Secret Airline Flies Non-Stop To Area 51. Jalopnik. 13 August 2015 . 29 December 2017.
  19. Rainer Bexten – Airliners.net – Aerial photo taken at Davis–Monthan Air Force Base. Photo from 29 February 2012.
  20. http://flightaware.com/live/flight/N288DP Flightaware.com
  21. Web site: ASN Aircraft accident Beechcraft 1900C N27RA Tonopah-Test Range Airport, NV (XSD). Harro. Ranter. aviation-safety.net.
  22. News: Leadbeater . Chris . 4 January 2018 . The top-secret US airline that you're not supposed to know about . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/north-america/united-states/las-vegas/articles/the-secret-airline-you-have-never-heard-of-Las-Vegas-Janet/ . 12 January 2022 . subscription . live . The Telegraph . United Kingdom . 20 April 2018 .
  23. Web site: The Janet Fleet . dreamlandresort.com . Dreamland Resort . 26 February 2019.
  24. Web site: Janet Tail Numbers . dreamlandresort.com . Dreamland Resort . 26 February 2019.
  25. Web site: ASN Beech 1900C N27RA crash . aviation-safety.net . Aviation Safety Network . 26 February 2019.