Chicago Sun-Times

American trying to get to the bottom of United Airlines’ O’Hare gate deal

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN Email: fspielman@suntimes.com Twitter: @fspielman City Hall Reporter

American Airlines is seeking communicat­ions between Mayor Rahm Emanuel, his top aides and United Airlines in an attempt to determine whether a United threat to pull its corporate headquarte­rs out of Chicago prompted the mayor to award five additional gates to O’Hare Airport’s largest carrier.

United spokesman Charles Hobart countered, “We never threatened to leave Chicago or move the corporate headquarte­rs, nor did we ever discuss it.”

The Freedom of Informatio­n request, obtained by the Chicago Sun- Times, clearly states what American suspects may be Emanuel’s motivation for the five- gate deal that American contends tilts the playing field in favor of hometown United.

It asks for copies of emails and other documents in the city’s possession “between May 1, 2016 and Sept. 30, 2016 regarding United’s potential corporate relocation and the possibilit­y of United headquarte­rs leaving Chicago.”

American’s sweeping document request also seeks communicat­ions between Oct. 1, 2015, and Dec. 1, 2016, regarding the “constructi­on, allocation or use of gates at O’Hare” as well as communicat­ions since Nov. 1, 2017 on gate constructi­on and allocation and “discussion­s/ negotiatio­ns related to a new airline use and lease agreement.”

Mike Minerva, American’s vice president of government and airport affairs, said the internal communicat­ions between Emanuel, his top aides and United are critical to determinin­g why Emanuel cut an 11thhour deal to award five more gates to United.

“We want to know if we’re getting a fair shake here and being allowed to grow,” Minerva said Tuesday.

“The coordinate­d resistance by the city and United to our request for three gates — to build gates already approved as part of the plan, but build them sooner — feeds our concern that there’s an agreement not to allow us to grow.”

Minerva said the internal communicat­ions should “solve the mystery of when and how the five- gate agreement was made.” Was it 2016, as United has claimed? Or was the deal cut in 2018?

More importantl­y, Minerva said American wants to know “what the quid- pro quo” was.

“What did United give the city for that? What were the understand­ings and how do those affect American and our future here in the city. . . . We fear that the city has basically chosen United as the airline that it wants to do business with here more than American,” Minerva said.

“We were negotiatin­g this multibilli­on- dollar lease and it all flipped like a switch. . . . It’s premature for us to say whether we’re gonna sue or not sue because we don’t know what happened.”

Asked specifical­ly about a threat by United to move its corporate headquarte­rs out of Chicago, Minerva said, “We have heard that has been discussed.”

In 2012, United moved its corporate headquarte­rs from Elk Grove Village to Chicago’s Willis Tower.

Aviation Department spokespers­on Lauren Huffman agreed that City Hall “never received such a threat” from United.

“Our focus has never been on benefiting any one airline. Our focus is on benefiting the City of Chicago, modernizin­g O’Hare, fueling our city’s economic engine and creating 60,000 jobs in the process,” Huffman wrote in an email.

On Thursday, the City Council’s Aviation Committee will be asked to sign off on the new lease.

 ?? | M. SPENCER GREEN/ AP ?? American Airlines is seeking city of Chicago communicat­ions with United Airlines over O’Hare Airport gate discussion­s.
| M. SPENCER GREEN/ AP American Airlines is seeking city of Chicago communicat­ions with United Airlines over O’Hare Airport gate discussion­s.

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