April 11, 2025

AVELO AIRLINES: NEITHER WOKE NOR BROKE

Connecticut’s favorite local airline, Avelo, is in trouble for making a strategic business decision:  taking a long term contract with ICE (US Immigration and Customs Enforcement) to fly deportation flights for the Department of Homeland Security.

Starting in May they’re dedicating three of their twenty 737 jets to fly from Mesa AZ to destinations both in the US and overseas (presumably flying over the “Gulf of America”), possibly even heading to El Salvador to deliver deportees to prisons there. 


The public reaction, while understandable, is misplaced.

Avelo has enjoyed amazing success flying out of New Haven’s Tweed airport, growing from 50,000 passengers in 2019 to a current 600,000 happy flyers.  They fly to 31 different destinations and have recently added flights from Bradley airport.

The convenience of flying from a local airport and the super low fares have made Avelo immensely popular, so the deal with ICE has some fans upset.  It’s almost as if Patagonia took a contract to design prison guard uniforms:  it’s way “off brand”.

But remember, Avelo is a common carrier airline.  Their business if flying planes, not passing judgement on passengers or destinations.

They’ve flown hundreds of charter flights for everything from sports teams to tour groups.  They’ve even flown deportation flights for ICE during the Biden administration… and nobody complained.

In fact, Avelo started as a charter airline, Casino Express (later renamed as Xtra Airlines), ferrying gamblers to Nevada.  They even provided charters for the Hillary Clinton campaign in 2016.  This is their business: flying.


Avelo has been receiving financial support from the state in the form of a tax exemption on its aviation fuel. The City of New Haven has been fawning over them as a hometown success story (even though the airline is officially headquartered in Texas).  But all that has now changed.

Now there are calls for a passenger boycott and financial penalties.   But hey… isn’t this anger misplaced?

If you’re upset with ICE’s deportations, isn’t your anger better directed at them?  Where are the legal appeals?  Penalizing or boycotting Avelo won’t stop the deportations. 

There are many US-flagged airlines taking the ICE charter contracts, including the reinvented Eastern Airlines which converted a 767 used for The New England Patriots to handle deportations to Brazil and Venezuela.

Avelo says this deal with ICE was a business decision.  Though profitable, Avelo (like other no-frills airlines) pinches pennies.  They don’t fly everywhere, every day… only on the heavier travel days when they can pack their planes and make a buck.

Taking on the ICE charters, they say, is a way of subsidizing their low fares as we face an economic recession and keeping their employees on payroll.  In fact, they’re looking to hire new flight attendants for their Mesa AZ operations, paying $28 an hour.

If protesters would “read the room” they’d realize that many of Avelo’s passengers probably support the deportations.  After all, President Trump is only doing what he promised and what got him elected.

As I’ve said before, Americans deserve the government they elect.

  

April 04, 2025

BY NIGHT BOAT FROM HARTFORD TO NYC

Flashback 200 years.  You have to travel from Hartford to NYC.  How do you get there?  Not by train (it didn’t exist yet) and certainly not by road (2-3 days by stage coach on dirt roads).  No, the best option was by boat.

Long before the railroad stitched Hartford to New York City, the Connecticut River served as the city’s lifeline to the outside world. From the late 1700s through the mid-1800s, an evolving fleet of sail and later steam-powered vessels carried passengers and cargo between Hartford and Manhattan, offering a vital and—by the standards of the day—relatively comfortable mode of travel.

At one point, Hartford saw 2000 ship arrivals and departures each year departing from the State Street or Talcott Street wharfs in Hartford,

In the early 1800s, packet sloops and schooners plied the river, their sails filling with wind as they made their way downriver to Long Island Sound. But the trip could still take several days, depending on weather and tides. Passengers brought food and bedding, and travel was anything but posh. Yet it was the only practical way to move not only people but bulk goods like timber, livestock, tobacco, and farm produce between inland Connecticut and the growing metropolis to the south.

The revolution came in 1813, when Captain Samuel Ward, inspired by Robert Fulton, launched the Connecticut, the first steamboat to serve the river. By the 1820s and 1830s, steam travel had become a fixture, offering more predictable service regardless of wind or tide. Steamboats like the 273-foot-long City of Hartford and the Granite State could make the journey from Hartford to New York City in 14 to 18 hours, often departing in the evening and arriving the next morning—ushering in the age of the “night boat.”

Steamboat "City of Hartford"

Fares were remarkably affordable. A cabin ticket—which included sleeping quarters and meals—typically cost $1.50 to $2.00 one way (about $75 today). Budget-conscious travelers could ride “deck passage” for just $0.50 to $1.00, though they had to supply their own bedding and brave the weather.

Passengers boarded at steamboat docks in Hartford, stopping at Middletown, Essex, and other towns along the river before entering Long Island Sound for the final leg to Manhattan’s bustling piers.

This watery highway remained dominant until the 1850s, when the completion of the Hartford and New Haven Railroad (opened in segments in 1844) and its southern connection to New York created the first through-train service. The railroad made the trip in 5-6 hours offering swanky parlor cars. By 1872, rail mergers made seamless rail travel commonplace, gradually eclipsing river travel in speed and convenience. 

The last steam boat between the two cities ran in the 1930’s due to declining passenger demand and the Depression.

So the next time you’re enjoying the (up to) three hour drive to The Big Apple, think back to simpler times when the trip was longer, but certainly more scenic.

 

AVELO AIRLINES: NEITHER WOKE NOR BROKE

Connecticut’s favorite local airline, Avelo, is in trouble for making a strategic business decision:  taking a long term contract with ICE (...