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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowRepublic Airways Holdings won the bankruptcy court auction for Frontier Airlines today, buying the Denver-based carrier
for almost $108.8 million after rival Southwest Airlines Co.’s bid was rejected.
Southwest said its $170 million bid
was deemed unacceptable because the carrier would not back down from a requirement that its pilots and Frontier’s work out
their integration before the deal would close. That was a non-issue for Republic, which has said it plans to keep operating
Frontier as a stand-alone carrier.
Pilot union negotiators for Southwest and Frontier talked until late Wednesday
without reaching a deal.
Denver travelers may see little change, but the deal is huge for Republic. Combined with
its recent purchase of Milwaukee-based Midwest Airlines, the Frontier deal transforms Republic from a strictly for-hire operator
of airplanes for big-name carriers to being in the business of competing for passengers.
Republic’s bid has it
buying all of Frontier Holdings when that company emerges from Chapter 11 protection, which is expected later this year. It
also agreed to waive any recovery on its $150 million general unsecured claim.
"Frontier has made impressive
strides in returning to sustained profitability in a challenging and uncertain economic environment," Republic Chairman,
President and CEO Bryan Bedford said in a written statement.
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