Las Vegas Review-Journal

CEO: Lv-hawaii flights a possibilit­y

Southwest to start flying from Calif. to islands

- By Mick Akers Las Vegas Review-journal

With Southwest Airlines set to embark on a new journey over the Pacific Ocean to Hawaii, nonstop flights from Las Vegas to the island chain may not be far behind.

Southwest CEO Gary Kelly called launching the Hawaii flights from four California cities the carrier’s priority this year. The airline conducted a successful test flight from Oakland, California, last week, bringing that reality one step closer.

“We’re going to go very focused into Hawaii. We want to ramp up and be relevant rather quickly,” Kelly said Tuesday after he addressed about 4,000 Southwest employees at the Las Vegas

Convention Center as part of the company’s 2019 Rally series kickoff, at which the airline celebrated achievemen­ts and plans.

With Southwest introducin­g Boeing 737 Max 7 planes to its fleet this year, the airline is able to fly farther than before, which will open up the Las Vegas-to-hawaii flights as soon as 2020, Kelly said.

“It’s (Las Vegas) strong, it’s stable and we’re going to continue to look for opportunit­ies to grow,” he said. The 737 Max 7 planes are “something we’re thinking about for Las Vegas and maybe for Hawaii.”

Southwest is awaiting certificat­ion by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion to allow for the commercial Hawaii flights to start. That process could be derailed if the government shuts down again. The 35-day partial shutdown that began in December and stretched into January already delayed the planned rollout of service.

If another shutdown is avoided and everything goes smoothly, and if Southwest receives approval in the next week, the airline can start those flights by the end of the first quarter. If the process stretches more than a week, April will be the earliest the Hawaii flights can start, Kelly said.

“We’re potentiall­y days away,” he said. “If the government shuts down again, that could be problemati­c. We’re just that close.”

With flights to Hawaii also originatin­g from San Diego, San Jose and Sacramento, Kelly said, Las Vegas will still benefit from the added service, despite nonstop flights not yet originatin­g from Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.

“You’ll (Las Vegas) have great access,” he said. “We’ll definitely have Hawaiians taking advantage of access to Las Vegas.”

Meanwhile, there are no immediate plans to add internatio­nal flights from Mccarran, Kelly said.

“In terms of connecting Las Vegas to internatio­nal, not at this point,” he said. “We’re always looking for those kind of opportunit­ies. Canada is down the road, hopefully not five years. Hopefully a couple or three years away.”

Stadium Effect

Southwest has shied away from naming rights deals with major stadiums and arenas around the country, and that probably will continue with the Raiders’ stadium near the Strip, scheduled to host games starting in 2020.

“I would never say never, but we’re a low-cost carrier, and we never felt like that was the best way to spend our marketing dollars,” Kelly said. “I think it’s very unlikely that we’d end up with something like that. We’re happy for Las Vegas that they landed an NFL franchise. It will be very exciting for the city, and we’ll want to be here to support you.”

Despite it being unlikely that Southwest’s name will don the outside of the Las Vegas stadium, Kelly sees the addition of the $1.8 billion, 65,000-seat domed facility as plus for the tourism industry.

“It’s an event, and Las Vegas is famous for events,” he said. “I think it’s just one more attractive thing about Las Vegas. There’s no question it will bring some traveling tourism. It certainly will bring a lot of attention to Vegas. I think there will be a halo effect from it. It’ll just be more top of mind to maybe not necessaril­y take advantage of the NFL but just to come to Las Vegas.”

Contact Mick Akers at makers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2920. Follow @mickakers on Twitter.

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