The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta CEO Ed Bastian: No state takeover of Atlanta’s airport

‘Operation with the city runs quite efficientl­y,’ Ed Bastian says at event.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Delta CEO Ed Bastian said he opposes a state takeover of Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, as Georgia’s Legislatur­e

plans a committee to study the idea.

“Atlanta is the largest, most successful airport in the world, and anything that would harm

that in terms of trying to move it for political gain between the city and state, we’re opposed,” Bastian said after a talk with Virgin Group founder Richard Branson at a Junior Achievemen­t of Georgia event Wednesday morning. “We think the operation with the city runs quite efficientl­y.” The state has floated the idea

of taking over Hartsfield-Jackson a number of times over the years. A resolution passed during this year’s legislativ­e session has called for a committee to study the creation of an airport authority to run Hartsfield-Jackson.

The move comes as a federal bribery investigat­ion has reached into airport contracts, and after controvers­ies involving the tumul

tuous 2016 firing of then-Atlanta airport general manager Miguel Southwell and the more recent firing of a deputy general manager after revelation­s of apotential conflict of interest.

The Atlanta airport’s recent challenges also include a debilitati­ng blackout that disrupted travel for passengers from around

the world one day last December. “No question that the issues around corruption and some of the political challenges of managing a large municipal commercial operation require further improvemen­t,” Bastian said. “I’m not certain why the state is not going to have the same issues on that that the city has.”

Hartsfield-Jackson is being run by interim general manager Balram Bheodari, after Roosevelt Council was shifted from his role heading the airport to become chief financial officer for the city.

have the crown jewel in air travel right here in Hartsfield-Jackson, and I think the city should take great pride in what they’ve built, and we’d be opposed to any change in the governance structure,” Bastian said.

Bastian in his remarks also weighed in on political issues, including immigratio­n.

Immigratio­n “is an evolving issue, and we’re watching it,” he said.

Bastian acknowledg­ed that airlines have flown some children back to their homes to reunite with families, with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security involved in buying the tickets.

“It’s very limited, it’s minor in number,” Bastian said. “The kids that have been coming back to their families flying on the airlines have actually been reunit

ing, not actually separating.” His remarks came as President Donald Trump said he planned to sign a measure to address migrant

family separation­s. Bastian said the airline’s customers “want to know where we stand on some of the important issues of the day.” “Within the populist movement, I think people are scared,” Bastian said. “Our business is bringing the world together . ...

When you see the world moving against that, it’s our call to action to jump in.”

 ??  ??
 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Jack Harris (left), president and CEO of Junior Achievemen­t of Georgia, Virgin Group founder Richard Branson and Delta CEO Ed Bastian hold a “fireside chat” Wednesday at the GWCC to discuss the partnershi­p between Delta and Virgin Atlantic and their goal of transformi­ng the customer experience.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Jack Harris (left), president and CEO of Junior Achievemen­t of Georgia, Virgin Group founder Richard Branson and Delta CEO Ed Bastian hold a “fireside chat” Wednesday at the GWCC to discuss the partnershi­p between Delta and Virgin Atlantic and their goal of transformi­ng the customer experience.

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