Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Avelo Airlines celebrated its inaugural flight to Las Vegas.

Air carrier was started in April by former exec at Allegiant Air

- By Richard N. Velotta

Avelo Airlines made a splash of sorts in Las Vegas on Thursday.

The Houston-based air carrier, founded and headed by a former Allegiant Air executive, touched down on time in its inaugural flight to Las Vegas from Santa Rosa, California, and navigated beneath a ceremonial water arch as it pulled into a Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport gate.

A return flight left Mccarran on Thursday afternoon to Charles M. Schulz-sonoma County Airport near Northern California’s wine country.

The company is promoting its Las Vegas service with one-way introducto­ry fares purchased by Sept. 29, starting at $29 and available on flights through Jan. 11.

Round trips between Sonoma County and Las Vegas will operate

Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays on 189-seat twin-engine Boeing 737-800 jets.

But Avelo’s founder, chairman and CEO, Andrew Levy, hinted in an interview Thursday that there could be more Las Vegas flights in the new airline’s future.

“Las Vegas is a unique market with an unlimited amount of demand so I can say it’s highly likely we’ll be doing more there,” said Levy, who spent 14 years at Allegiant, where he had risen to president of the company.

Levy recruited several other former Allegiant leaders to Avelo, including Greg Baden, who is chief operating officer, Todd Cinnamon, head of informatio­n technology, and Sean Hopkins, head of contracts.

Avelo launched its inaugural flight in April with a schedule that includes round trips from its operationa­l hub at Hollywood Burbank Airport to Sonoma, Redding and Eureka, California; Medford, Eugene and Bend, Oregon; Ogden and Provo, Utah; Pasco, Washington; and Fort Collins, Colorado.

In December, Avelo will replicate its West Coast flight scheme, using New Haven, Connecticu­t, as its hub with round-trip flights to five destinatio­ns in Florida: Orlando, Tampa, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Fort Myers.

On the East Coast, Avelo will operate 147-seat Boeing 737-700 twin-engine jets. The airline currently has three 737-800s and three 737-700s in its fleet. Two more 800s and two more 700s will be added later in the year.

Aircraft have either been acquired from or leased from Southwest Airlines, which is substituti­ng some of its 800- and 700-series planes for MAX 7 and MAX 8 jets.

Levy credits the hard work of the company’s “terrific management team” and its 220 employees for successful­ly launching an airline in the middle of a pandemic. He said that once Avelo begins its East Coast operations, the employee count will rise to about 300. No employees are based in Las Vegas, but that could change should operations grow. Avelo currently contracts for its ground operations at Mccarran.

Levy said he has adopted operationa­l strategies he likes from competitor­s and hires workers capable of implementi­ng those strategies. The company has adopted “Soul of Service” culture grounded in a “One Crew” mindset that promotes teamwork, kindness and doing the right thing.

Levy said Avelo is a name agreed upon by his management team that blends “avenue,” connoting the hometown aspect of flights into small secondary airports, with “velocity.”

The company plans to launch a “Hello Avelo” campaign to help customers learn the pronunciat­ion of the airline.

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Avelo Airlines
 ?? Avelo Airlines ?? An Avelo Airlines jet taxis beneath a ceremonial water arch after touching down during its inaugural flight to Las Vegas from Santa Rosa, Calif.
Avelo Airlines An Avelo Airlines jet taxis beneath a ceremonial water arch after touching down during its inaugural flight to Las Vegas from Santa Rosa, Calif.

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