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Business

Fly Jamaica prepares for January 25 take off

Friday, January 18, 2013



NEW local airline company Fly Jamaica will make its first commercial flight on January 25 -- from the Norman Manley International Airport in Kingston to JFK Airport in New York.

Fly Jamaica will start off operating one Boeing 757-200 aircraft, which can seat up to 200 passengers, with four flights weekly from Kingston.

Captain Lloyd Tai, the airline's chief operating officer, told Caribbean Business Report that the airline will not operate as a low-cost carrier. Services will include business and economy classes, two free checked bags, free meals on all flights, and service in all cabins, said Tai the company's a launch ceremony on Wednesday at Devon House.

"We are a standard carrier," he said.

"It's a little bit against the tradition which is going on now, but what we have seen in particularly the Jamaican market, that is a key component of our traffic, is that they want to be able to utilise all of those facilities," he said.

Jamaica Civil Aviation Authority (JCAA) issued an Air Operator Certificate to Fly Jamaica in September of last year. It was the first full certification that the department has done on a large airline, according to Director General of the JCAA, Lieutenant Colonel Oscar Derby.

Derby said the airline was able to be certified within a year, after passing a series of rigorous tests. In the demonstration flight, from Jamaica to Guyana, the operators demonstrated that they had a depth of experience, he noted.

"We are very proud to know that this Caribbean collaboration has worked and has worked well," said Derby.

Fly Jamaica is a partnership between Guyanese Paul Ronald Reece, the company's chief executive officer, and three Jamaican shareholders including Tai. Transport Minister Dr Omar Davies called it "real evidence of regional co-operation".

Fly Jamaica will also operate between Kingston and Guyana, located on the northern coast of South America but culturally a part of the anglophone Caribbean. Davies noted that air travel between those two destinations has always been problematic and lauded the airline for alleviating the challenge.

Fly Jamaica has 80 employees.



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