Virgin America to be allowed to fly, if CEO is fired
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The Department of Transportation has spoken, and embattled airline-to-be Virgin America can fly… IF — and only if — they fire their CEO.
That would be Fred Reid, whom you may remember from such video aircraft tours like this one.
Here’s the word from the DOT:
“We tentatively find that the applicant’s replacement of Mr. Reid as CEO and board member with a U.S. citizen who has no prior affiliation with the Virgin Group would substantially remedy our concerns over the independence of the applicant’s management from the Virgin Group,” DOT said.
As a condition of gaining approval, Virgin America must confirm Reid’s termination of employment within 90 days of the carrier’s obtaining its certificate, and any follow-on consulting work must end within 180 days of his removal.
Tough break for Fred, but I’m not worried about him. Something tells me he’s got a platinum parachute waiting for him.
There is also a dispute over the use of the Virgin name, and the payment of royalties to the British mothership. That could actually be a bigger snag, in the end, since the Virgin name is something the airline presumably wants.
Pass the popcorn, again.
Related:
- Virgin America is un-American
- Virgin America wants your vote, teases you with glimpses of their planes
- Update: Virgin Atlantic revises its ownership structure, potentially making it legal


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March 21st, 2007 at 11:06 am |
I think that’s a win-win solution. Virgin Atlantic gets to fly, the FAA gets to say they insisted on US management for a US airline, Fred probably gets another nice job somewhere else in the Virgin empire, and the US consumer gets more competition from a carrier which, hopefully, will offer decent service.