JetBlue adds MIA flights to its New Year s resolutions
Low-cost carrier will launch first-ever Miami service in February
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MIAMI, Dec. 17, 2020 /PRNewswire/ Low-cost carrier JetBlue Airways, one of the busiest airlines in the U.S. with 42 million passengers in 2019, fully committed today to one of its New Year s resolutions: launch first-ever flights at Miami International Airport.
(PRNewsfoto/Miami International Airport)
JetBlue has set February 11, 2021 – the airline s 21
st birthday - as the start date for its Miami route expansion, which will include service to four U.S. cities: Boston (up to four times daily); Los Angeles (up to twice daily); New York-JFK (up to four times daily); and Newark (up to four times daily). The Miami-Los Angeles route will feature JetBlue Mint®, the airline s premium travel experience. The maximum of 14 daily flights would instantly make JetBlue one of MIA s busiest passenger airlin
MIA task force gets local cargo community vaccine ready
Airport, airlines, forwarders, ground handlers and government agencies join forces
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MIAMI, Dec. 17, 2020 /PRNewswire/ On December 16, more than 50 representatives from Miami-Dade County s air cargo community attended the second virtual meeting of the Miami-Dade Aviation Department s MIAVAC19 Task Force, formed to lead the preparation and coordination of Miami International Airport s cargo community for the arrival and mass distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine domestically and internationally.
(PRNewsfoto/Miami International Airport)
As the busiest U.S. airport for international freight and the leading cargo gateway to and from Latin America and the Caribbean, MIA is poised to be one of the key global hubs for the vaccine. MIA is the first airport in the Western Hemisphere and only the second in the world to be designated by the International Air Transport Associat
Thursday s Daily Pulse | 12/10/2020
Florida’s coronavirus cases shot up again. So now deaths have, too.
More and more people are dying from COVID-19 in Florida, again, just as expected. In the fall, new coronavirus cases started rebounding in the state. By mid-October, rising cases led to more people in Florida’s hospitals. Rises in people testing positive, ending up in the hospital, and now dying: the natural progression of the outbreak is the same pattern that played out this summer. As of yet, there are no signs of the trend changing course. [Source: Tampa Bay Times]
Obamacare enrollment at all-time high in Florida