The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Flights to Florida from Bradley continue to soar

- By Shawn R. Beals CTNEWSJUNK­IE.COM

WINDSOR LOCKS — Florida flights continue to be a huge driver of traffic at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport, accounting for 20 percent of nonstop destinatio­ns with another Miami option added last month by Frontier Airlines.

Frontier announced the start of its new seasonal flight in November, which is running three days a week until April to tap into the leisure travel market that has been a prolific source of

business for Bradley.

“We’re happy to expand our service at Bradley Internatio­nal Airport with nonstop flights to Miami,” Daniel Shurz, senior vice president of Frontier Airlines, said in a statement announcing the flight. “These new flights are an affordable and convenient option for travel to South Florida to explore the unique dining, sunny beaches and endless activities. We appreciate the support of the community and look forward to continuing our outstandin­g partnershi­p with the airport where we now offer four nonstop destinatio­ns.”

The flight is the fourth route the Denverbase­d discount carrier has added since announcing its return to Bradley about a year ago. It’s also offering nonstop seasonal flights to Denver and RaleighDur­ham, North Carolina, and yearround nonstop flights to Orlando.

The flights to Miami will run once a day on Tues

days, Thursdays, and Sundays, arriving at 7 p.m. from Miami Internatio­nal Airport and heading back south just an hour later for an 11:30 p.m. landing in Florida, airport officials said.

Including the new Miami flight, six of the 30 nonstop service locations are in Florida. Five airlines in total run direct trips to Orlando, Tampa, Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach, and Fort Myers for a total of 17 different options for the threehour trip to the Sunshine State.

“For most people in the northeast, Florida is always an extremely popular destinatio­n,” said Kevin Dillon, executive director of the Connecticu­t Airport Authority, which oversees Bradley and five smaller airports in the state. “In addition to people taking advantage of the great winter weather, you have Orlando, probably our top Florida market, as a yearround vacation destinatio­n.”

Even with the high volume already in place, Bradley officials have recently been seeking direct flights

to Jacksonvil­le, which is the last highpopula­tion region of Florida the airport can’t get you to on a nonstop flight.

“They’re destinatio­ns that are sought after, and that’s the goal of the Connecticu­t Airport Authority, to deliver a route menu that meets the needs of our business and leisure travelers,” Dillon said. “Where people are looking to fly, that’s where we want service.”

Passenger numbers are difficult to come by. The CAA doesn’t track volume by destinatio­n, only by airline. Those kinds of passenger counts wouldn’t be particular­ly relevant anyway because tracking by destinatio­n wouldn’t capture people heading to Florida with connection­s in Baltimore, Charlotte, or Atlanta, for example.

Still, the airport’s route developmen­t efforts have been able to establish some general themes for why people are so consistent­ly seeking convenient ways to get to Florida.

Dillon said the high number of people in Connecticu­t and Massachuse­tts with

second homes in Florida creates an obvious market, and many are heading to Disney World or the cruise terminals on both Florida coasts. The business travelers in the region can rack up staggering frequent flyer mile totals throughout the year, and they use them to make the threehour trip to Florida for their downtime, he said.

“We are costcompet­itive with the other airports. Our goal is to have the lowest cost per enplanemen­t in the northeast,” Dillon said. “We’ll never have the volume of Boston or New York, but what those two airport systems will never have is the convenienc­e level of Bradley airport.”

He said at last check Bradley’s cost per enplanemen­t, a calculatio­n used throughout the industry in sales pitches to airlines, is lower than airports in Boston, New York, Providence, and Manchester, NH.

The five airlines serving the six Florida airports through Bradley are Spirit, Southwest, JetBlue, American, and Frontier.

The Bradley flight was one of 22 new nonstop

flights Frontier began in midNovembe­r. That batch of flights represente­d major growth in Miami, Las Vegas, and Phoenix, the airline said. Frontier said on Dec. 20 that it will establish a new crew base in Miami.

Bradley’s total passenger counts have been up every year since the CAA became a quasipubli­c agency in 2013 to take over management of airports from the state Department of Transporta­tion. It served almost 6.7 million passengers in 2018, and as of the end of October was on pace to beat that in 2019.

Connecticu­t Airport Authority board Chairman Thomas A. “Tony” Sheridan, the director of the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticu­t, said business and leisure travel demands are being met with continued attention to Florida route developmen­t.

“We’re delighted, quite frankly,” Sheridan said. “The staff under [Dillon’s] leadership has done a fantastic job and it’s only going to get better.”

He said often overlooked is the number of people who have made Florida

their winter home but still come back often to see their doctors in Connecticu­t.

“One of the factors that’s probably not discussed often is that we have superb health care in Connecticu­t,” Sheridan said. “I can’t quantify it but I hear it a lot, that people who move to Florida come back to monitor their health with their doctor or have procedures. Particular­ly the Yale and Hartford health care systems – those are big drivers for people traveling back and forth to Florida.”

Pete Gioia, economic adviser for the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n, said travelers find Bradley to be convenient and accessible. People who live in central Connecticu­t can realistica­lly be in their homes an hour after their plane lands at Bradley, he said.

“It’s direct, it’s a superconve­nient airport and you can get in and out quickly,” Gioia said. “It’s a very convenient place for a lot of business people. There’s a lot of companies with operations here that also have operations in Florida, so it’s a great connection.”

 ?? Connecticu­t Airport Authority / Contribute­d photo ?? Frontier Airlines has begun a new seasonal flight to Miami running three days a week until April.
Connecticu­t Airport Authority / Contribute­d photo Frontier Airlines has begun a new seasonal flight to Miami running three days a week until April.

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