Avelo Airlines

Avelo contracts to fly ICE deportation flights

Avelo under fire for contracting with ICE for deportation flights

The U.S. government usually contracts with charter companies for deportation flights. And you can read a ProPublica account of those flights here.

But now a commercial budget airline, Houston-based Avelo, has a contract with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration Control and Enforcement agency (ICE) to operate deportation flights out of Arizona’s Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport beginning in mid-May, according to the Associated Press and others.

In a statement, Avelo airline CEO Andrew Levy said the company decided to support ICE’s efforts because it would help with Avelo’s expansion and would protect jobs, but acknowledged the move “is a sensitive and complicated topic.”

Avelo is currently recruiting staff for these flights with a job listing on its site that explains Avelo will be operating a charter program for the Department of Homeland Security and that flights will be both domestic and international “to support DHS’s deportation efforts.”

At the same time, Avelo has announced it will be pulling up stakes Boise Airport (BOI) as of April 27, according to the Idaho Statesman, and at Charles M. Schulz-Sonoma County Airport (STS) as of May 1, according to The Press Democrat.

Petition to boycott Avelo Airlines

A Change.org petition launched by the New Haven Immigrant Heritage Coalition demands that Avelo Airlines halt deportation flight plans in cooperation with the Trump Administration. (Avelo operates flights out of Tweed Airport near New Haven).

“We pledge to boycott the airline until they stop plans to profit off ICE flights that are tearing families and communities apart and removing some legal residents….” the petition states.

Now two airlines will ship your wine for free

Love wine? Love taking wine home when you travel?

We do too.

Alaska Airlines has a long-running and very popular Wine Flies Free program that allows members of its mileage plan program to check a case of wine without having to pay an extra baggage fee when flying from 32 West Coast cities in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and California.

As a great and valuable bonus, in Oregon, Washington and Idaho your Alaska Airlines boarding pass gets you free wine tastings at participatng wineries.

Now Avelo Airlines is joining the wine-flies-free bandwagon with its own version of the program.

The airline doesn’t service as many cities as Alaska does, but beginning on National Wine Day (May 25), Avelo customers can begin checking a case of wine for free from the Bay Area’s Charles M. Schulz Sonoma County Airport (STS) in Santa Rosa, CA.

Avelo currently offers nonstop flights from Sonoma to Salem, Oregon (SLE), Bend/Redmond (RDM), Boise (BOI), Glacier Park International Airport (FCA) in Kalispell, MT, Las Vegas (LAS), Hollywood Burbank Airport (BUR) and Palm Springs (PSP).

“We know that visiting the vineyards and sampling Northern California’s world-famous wines is one of the most appealing reasons for visiting the Sonoma County region,” said Avelo Airlines Founder and CEO Andrew Levy, “It is our hope Avelo’s new Wine Travels Free program will make our Customers’ trips to California Wine Country that much more enjoyable and memorable.”

On both Alaska and Avelo, you must be at least 21 years of age to take advantage of this perk. And on both airlines one case of wine is considered to be a single box or case containing up to 12 bottles and weighing 50 lbs or less.

Let’s raise a glass to airlines that let wines fly free.

(photo courtesy Flickr Commons)