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Monday, February 26, 2018

California Pacific Airlines (CP Air) is a planned airline that is headquartered on the grounds of McClellan-Palomar Airport in Carlsbad, California.

="History">History




California Pacific Airlines First Embraer 170 - California Pacific Airlines ERJ-170 (Recorded July 10, 2012, at the Delivery Ceremony) N176EC (cn 17000006), later registered N760CP (Built 2002) Shot at Carlsbad - McClellan-Palomar Airport...

In 2009, 89-year-old Ted Vallas proposed starting a new airline out of Palomar Airport. Vallas, a San Diego County businessperson from North County, had previously operated Air Resorts Airlines, wanted to create a San Diego County-based airline.

The planned start of operations had been pushed back to the fall of 2012 from late 2011, due to delays in obtaining approval from the Federal Aviation Administration. At the time, the airline had about $14 million in assets, all Vallas' money, with plans to raise up to $32 million more from private investment.

On August 10, 2011, the DOT issued a preliminary show cause order to approve the required interstate certificate authority for Carlsbad-Palomar Airlines, Inc. d/b/a California Pacific Airlines (“CP Air”). The department found CP Air is fit, willing, and able to provide interstate air transportation of persons, property, and mail, and should be issued a Certificate of Public Convenience. After 14 days on August 24, 2011, no objections were filed by other parties and this DOT order was made final.

On September 9, 2011, CP Air's application for Part 121 certification was accepted by the FAA. The company has also passed it first formal application meeting which tests the company's knowledge of processes and procedures of its operations manual system.

By February 6, 2012, California Pacific had passed Phase I of the FAA's formal Part 121 certification process. At the time, California Pacific was the only US applicant airline in the process.

Phase II of the application process began after a lease was signed for at least one aircraft. This phase, known as design assessment, is a detailed page by page assessment of the airline's manual system and training procedures. This was expected to be completed by the summer of 2012. Phase III will involve a physical review of an aircraft's layout followed by proving runs. Proving runs are simulated full flight operations without passengers. It is designed to assess an applicant's performance in actual flight operations. Successful completion of proving runs is the final step before regulatory approval would be granted for a Part 121 certificate.

California Pacific's first 72-seat Embraer 170 arrived in Carlsbad on July 6, 2012. The Embraer 170, previously N176EC, had previously been operated by now-defunct Cirrus Airlines. The aircraft's registration changed to N760CP, in honor of the home town area code, following approval by the FAA on August 30.

In November 2013, the FAA informed CP Air that it would be sometime in 2014 before they can complete review of the revised application. CEO John Selvaggio told a reporter that the employees had been furloughed and he was returning to his Florida home. The one aircraft delivered was returned to the aircraft maker to save the reported $200,000 monthly rent.

As of April 2015, Carlsbad airport city manager considered the airline "defunct".

In March 2016, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported that the airline stated that the airline could open in as little as four months, though county officials indicated they believed the process would take longer. By that time, the airline's planes had changed to begin operations with 30-seat Embraer ERJ-135 jets, and add the Embraer 170 at a later date.

Destinations


California Pacific AIrlines Embraer ERJ-170 â€
California Pacific AIrlines Embraer ERJ-170 â€" Juergen's paint hangar. Source : www.juergenbaumbusch.de

By the end of 2013, the airline hoped to begin service from McClellan-Palomar Airport in Carlsbad, CA to three cities in California (Oakland, Sacramento, and San Jose), Phoenix, Arizona, Las Vegas, Nevada, and later, Cabo San Lucas. By 2015, the airline planned to serve destinations as far east as the Midwest United States and Canada. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer said that the airline's flight model resembles the point to point service established by Pacific Southwest Airlines (PSA), though the airline will not market itself as a low-cost airline. Vallas said that he wants to emulate PSA's style, and CP Air's staff at the time of its founding included several former PSA employees.

Fleet


endeavour California Pacific Airlines
endeavour California Pacific Airlines. Source : 20081202113624_96422.webstarts.com

California Pacific Airlines initially proposed operating a fleet of Embraer 170 aircraft. One aircraft was delivered to the airline in June 2012 and painted in California Pacific livery. After sitting parked for several months at McClellanâ€"Palomar Airport in Carlsbad, the aircraft was subleased to Honeywell Aerospace, which operated it on several test flights from Deer Valley Airport in Phoenix, Arizona. By November 2013, the aircraft had been returned to its lessor.

In March 2016, the airline was reported to be planning to begin operations with a fleet of three Embraer ERJ-135 aircraft, with the Embraer 170 to be added at a later date.

References


N760CP | Embraer 170-100LR | California Pacific Airlines | Mike ...
N760CP | Embraer 170-100LR | California Pacific Airlines | Mike .... Source : www.jetphotos.com

External links


Louise Julig - California Pacific Airlines Magazine: Baja Sailing
Louise Julig - California Pacific Airlines Magazine: Baja Sailing. Source : louisejulig.com

  • California Pacific Airlines

N760CP | Embraer 170-100LR | California Pacific Airlines | Mike ...
N760CP | Embraer 170-100LR | California Pacific Airlines | Mike .... Source : www.jetphotos.com

 
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