The Denver Post

Southwest Airlines returning in 2021 to Mississipp­i airport

Flights also will be added back to Colorado Springs

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JACKSON, MISS. » Southwest Airlines will start offering flights to and from Mississipp­i’s capital city in 2021, about seven years after the low- cost carrier stopped the service.

Southwest board chairman and CEO Gary C. Kelly said in a third- quarter financial statement Thursday that in the first half of 2021, the airline intends to return to JacksonMed­gar Wiley Evers Internatio­nal Airport and to add service at Colorado Springs Municipal Airport and at Savannah/ Hilton Head Internatio­nal Airport in Georgia.

“We are leveraging additional airports in cornerston­e cities where our customer base is large, along with adding easier access to popular leisureori­ented destinatio­ns from across our domesticfo­cused network,” Kelly said.

Southwest offered flights to and from the Jackson airport for 17 years, but it stopped in June 2014.

That departure was among reasons the state tried to take control over the airport board from the city, sparking a lawsuit that is still in court.

Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba praised the Jackson airport board and CEO for working to bring back the carrier.

“It’s great news for our city and great news for travelers throughout the region who have been missing access to Southwest’s accessible flights and low fares,” Lumumba said in a news release.

The city of Jackson sued in 2016 to block a law signed by then- Gov.

Phil Bryant, which would have removed Jackson’s role in appointing the five- member board overseeing the airport.

The law would have created a new nine- person board, four of whom would be appointed by the governor or his appointees.

Jackson’s mayor and city council would get one appointmen­t each; suburban Madison and Rankin counties would get one each; and the lieutenant governor would get an appointee.

Legislator­s who pushed for the change argued, in part, that Southwest’s departure was evidence of poor management by the five- member airport board, even though airline executives said the decision was made for financial reasons.

Jackson and airport officials have called the airport restructur­ing law a hostile takeover.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion said it would not consider approving any change until courts resolve the struggle.

Democratic Sen. John Horhn of Jackson told WLBT- TV that with Southwest returning, he wants to try to repeal the law on restructur­ing the airport board.

“The arguments from the get- go were hollow,” Horhn said.

“They were just smoke screens to cover the Republican­s’ desire to ... control the airport and wrest control from the city of Jackson.”

Republican Sen. Josh Harkins of Brandon said Southwest’s decision to return to the Jackson market doesn’t change his opinion that the airport needs regional leadership.

“It’s not a takeover in my mind, but an expansion of the board,” Harkins said.

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