Air L.A.


Air L.A., a wholly owned subsidiary of Air L.A. Inc was a U.S. commuter airline headquartered in the Westchester area of Los Angeles, California. It was founded by Wayne Schoenfeld, Ken Dickey and Bill Wolf. It ceased all operations in September 1995.

1980s

Air LA started life as a charter airline in the late 1970s. It first started scheduled operations using Piper Chieftain aircraft in May 1982. It served Blythe, Burbank, Grand Canyon and Las Vegas. It gradually expanded its network to take in Bermuda Dunes/Palm Desert, Bullhead City /Laughlin, Ontario and Las Vegas and by the late 1980s was operating British Aerospace BAe Jetstream 31 commuter propjets.

1990s

In November 1990, Air L.A. added Mexico service through the acquisition of Air Resorts, another southern California-based commuter airline.
In April 1993, it had the distinction of entering into one of the first international codeshare agreements with Aeromexico. The relationship began initially on the Los Angeles to Tijuana route and expanded to another of other Mexican cities primarily out of Tijuana and Hermosillo. The airline bought Conquest Airlines in 1995. In early 1995 Air L.A. also bought St. Paul, MN based Capitol Air.
In 1993, the airline operated a fleet of Fairchild Swearingen Metroliners, seating 19 passengers.
It served the following California cities: Los Angeles, San Diego, Ontario, California, Bakersfield, Fresno, Stockton and Monterey. In Arizona, it served Phoenix. In Nevada, it served Las Vegas.
The airline also served two states in Mexico. In Baja California, it served Tijuana, Ensenada, Mexicali and San Felipe. In Sonora, it served Hermosillo.

Destinations in 1989

Air LA was serving the following destinations in 1989 with scheduled passenger flights operated with British Aerospace BAe Jetstream 31 turboprop aircraft:
Air LA was serving the following destinations in 1995 with scheduled passenger flights operated with Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner turboprop aircraft:
Air LA operated the following aircraft types during its existence: