SOURCE: Raleigh (NC) News & ObserverAUDIENCE: 701,000 [provided by Nielsen//NetRatings]
DATE: 08−15−2012HEADLINE: Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
Source Website
Published Wed, Aug 15, 2012 05:23 PM
Modified Wed, Aug 15, 2012 05:25 PM
Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
By Bruce Siceloff−[email protected]
By Bruce Siceloff The News and Observer
Tags:United Airlines
Silicon Valley
startups
entrepreneurs
RDU Airport
Durham
Raleigh
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh−Durham InternationalAirport to San Francisco on Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers thought about the airports they wouldavoid " for a change " on their trip to the West Coast.
"This is great," said Joe Freddoso, president of MCNC, a Triangle−based technology nonprofit. "I loveDallas−Fort Worth, but I like overflying it, too."
Thirteen−year−old Jacob Trubey of Cary was about to fly on his own, for the first time.
Highlights: NC, NORTH CAROLINA, MCNC
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Thursday, August 16, 2012
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Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman. Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Real-time updating is enabled. (Pause)
Showing 0
comments
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
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Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
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Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
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Cary News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 1 of 6
8/16/2012http://www.carynews.com/2012/08/15/62693/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
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newsobserver Home / News / newsobserver
Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman. Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Real-time updating is enabled. (Pause)
Showing 0
comments
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
Story Tools
More newsobserver
Advertisements
Most Popular
Stories Emailed
Last 24 Hours
l
l Cary YMCA SuperSkippers jump rope on TV
with first lady Michelle Obama
l
l
l Cary soccer shuts out East Wake
Last 7 Days
l Cary ends red-light camera program
l Cary delays chicken-coop vote
l Merle Haggard, Kris Kristofferson perform in
Cary
l
l
Printer Friendly Email to a Friend
Enlarge Font Decrease Font
del.icio.us Digg it
Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
Like
6Sort by newest first
M Subscribe by email S RSS
Print Ads
View more Print Ads >
Top Jobs View All
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A better job awaits
business office manager
US-NC-Nashville
Chemical Tank Truck Driver
Georgia-Pacific Chemicals, LLC
US-NC-Conway
Facility Maintenance Tech-Mechanical
Keywords:
City or Zip:
Triangle Member Newspapers: The News & Observer | The Chapel Hill News | The Cary News | The Durham News | Eastern Wake News | The Herald | North Raleigh News
© Copyright 2012, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | AdvertisingHosting Partners of
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Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
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Cary News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 2 of 6
8/16/2012http://www.carynews.com/2012/08/15/62693/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Serving Cary and Morrisville
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Home News Sports Schools Entertainment Business Opinion Community Blogs Obituaries Celebrations Weather Shopping Classifieds About
newsobserver Home / News / newsobserver
Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman. Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Real-time updating is enabled. (Pause)
Showing 0
comments
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
Story Tools
More newsobserver
Advertisements
Most Popular
Stories Emailed
Last 24 Hours
l
l Cary YMCA SuperSkippers jump rope on TV
with first lady Michelle Obama
l
l
l Cary soccer shuts out East Wake
Last 7 Days
l Cary ends red-light camera program
l Cary delays chicken-coop vote
l Merle Haggard, Kris Kristofferson perform in
Cary
l
l
Printer Friendly Email to a Friend
Enlarge Font Decrease Font
del.icio.us Digg it
Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
Like
6Sort by newest first
M Subscribe by email S RSS
Print Ads
View more Print Ads >
Top Jobs View All
Find a Job
5
6
A better job awaits
business office manager
US-NC-Nashville
Chemical Tank Truck Driver
Georgia-Pacific Chemicals, LLC
US-NC-Conway
Facility Maintenance Tech-Mechanical
Keywords:
City or Zip:
Triangle Member Newspapers: The News & Observer | The Chapel Hill News | The Cary News | The Durham News | Eastern Wake News | The Herald | North Raleigh News
© Copyright 2012, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | AdvertisingHosting Partners of
newsobserver.com
Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
Add New Comment
Please wait…
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Cary News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 3 of 6
8/16/2012http://www.carynews.com/2012/08/15/62693/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Serving Cary and Morrisville
Register / Log In
Site Search
Home News Sports Schools Entertainment Business Opinion Community Blogs Obituaries Celebrations Weather Shopping Classifieds About
newsobserver Home / News / newsobserver
Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman. Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Real-time updating is enabled. (Pause)
Showing 0
comments
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
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Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
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Cary News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 4 of 6
8/16/2012http://www.carynews.com/2012/08/15/62693/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Serving Cary and Morrisville
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Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman. Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Real-time updating is enabled. (Pause)
Showing 0
comments
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
Story Tools
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Stories Emailed
Last 24 Hours
l
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with first lady Michelle Obama
l
l
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Last 7 Days
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l Cary delays chicken-coop vote
l Merle Haggard, Kris Kristofferson perform in
Cary
l
l
Printer Friendly Email to a Friend
Enlarge Font Decrease Font
del.icio.us Digg it
Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
Like
6Sort by newest first
M Subscribe by email S RSS
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Keywords:
City or Zip:
Triangle Member Newspapers: The News & Observer | The Chapel Hill News | The Cary News | The Durham News | Eastern Wake News | The Herald | North Raleigh News
© Copyright 2012, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | AdvertisingHosting Partners of
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Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
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Cary News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 5 of 6
8/16/2012http://www.carynews.com/2012/08/15/62693/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Serving Cary and Morrisville
Register / Log In
Site Search
Home News Sports Schools Entertainment Business Opinion Community Blogs Obituaries Celebrations Weather Shopping Classifieds About
newsobserver Home / News / newsobserver
Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman. Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Real-time updating is enabled. (Pause)
Showing 0
comments
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
Story Tools
More newsobserver
Advertisements
Most Popular
Stories Emailed
Last 24 Hours
l
l Cary YMCA SuperSkippers jump rope on TV
with first lady Michelle Obama
l
l
l Cary soccer shuts out East Wake
Last 7 Days
l Cary ends red-light camera program
l Cary delays chicken-coop vote
l Merle Haggard, Kris Kristofferson perform in
Cary
l
l
Printer Friendly Email to a Friend
Enlarge Font Decrease Font
del.icio.us Digg it
Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
Like
6Sort by newest first
M Subscribe by email S RSS
Print Ads
View more Print Ads >
Top Jobs View All
Find a Job
5
6
A better job awaits
business office manager
US-NC-Nashville
Chemical Tank Truck Driver
Georgia-Pacific Chemicals, LLC
US-NC-Conway
Facility Maintenance Tech-Mechanical
Keywords:
City or Zip:
Triangle Member Newspapers: The News & Observer | The Chapel Hill News | The Cary News | The Durham News | Eastern Wake News | The Herald | North Raleigh News
© Copyright 2012, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | AdvertisingHosting Partners of
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Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
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Cary News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 6 of 6
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Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman.
Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
Story Tools
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Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
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Triangle Member Newspapers: The News & Observer | The Chapel Hill News | The Cary News | The Durham News | Eastern Wake News | The Herald | North Raleigh News
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Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Parental Consent | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | AdvertisingHosting Partners of
newsobserver.com
Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
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Eastern Wake News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 1 of 4
8/16/2012http://www.easternwakenews.com/2012/08/15/19289/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
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Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF, [email protected]
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman.
Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
Story Tools
More newsobserver
Advertisements
Most Popular
Stories Emailed
Last 24 Hours
l Womanless pageant strikes a chord
l Zebulon man devoted himself to coaching
others
l Wendell woman killed in head-on collision
l Zebulon mayor says town has options on water
decision
l Multimedia
Last 7 Days
l Wendell woman killed in head-on collision
l Local repo man hits the small screen
l Man found dead after shootings in Wendell store
l Teen dies after shooting in Zebulon
l Wheeler: Eastern Wake ignored in school
politics
Printer Friendly Email to a Friend
Enlarge Font Decrease Font
del.icio.us Digg it
Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
Print Ads
View more Print Ads >
Top Jobs View All
Find a Job
5
6
A better job awaits
business office manager
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Chemical Tank Truck Driver
Georgia-Pacific Chemicals, LLC
US-NC-Conway
Facility Maintenance Tech-Mechanical
Keywords:
City or Zip:
Hot Deals View All »
Triangle Member Newspapers: The News & Observer | The Chapel Hill News | The Cary News | The Durham News | Eastern Wake News | The Herald | North Raleigh News
© Copyright 2012, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Parental Consent | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | AdvertisingHosting Partners of
newsobserver.com
Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
5
6
Acceller, Inc.ADT Authorized DealerB.H.C. AutomotiveCommunity Business MarketplaceCommunity Family MedicineDebnam Ace HardwareEast Wake Animal HospitalEast Wake FurnitureFantastic Tires & Wheels Inc.Granite TransformationsIn Loving Memory of Mary (Malu) LaugheryiOn My SleepJ.Y. Monk Real Estate SchoolJulian S. Drew, DDSLife Alert
Eastern Wake News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 2 of 4
8/16/2012http://www.easternwakenews.com/2012/08/15/19289/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Register / Log In
High:
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Low:
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°
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newsobserver Home / News / newsobserver
Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman.
Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
Buy Photo
The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
Story Tools
More newsobserver
Advertisements
Most Popular
Stories Emailed
Last 24 Hours
l Womanless pageant strikes a chord
l Zebulon man devoted himself to coaching
others
l Wendell woman killed in head-on collision
l Zebulon mayor says town has options on water
decision
l Multimedia
Last 7 Days
l Wendell woman killed in head-on collision
l Local repo man hits the small screen
l Man found dead after shootings in Wendell store
l Teen dies after shooting in Zebulon
l Wheeler: Eastern Wake ignored in school
politics
Printer Friendly Email to a Friend
Enlarge Font Decrease Font
del.icio.us Digg it
Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
Print Ads
View more Print Ads >
Top Jobs View All
Find a Job
5
6
A better job awaits
business office manager
US-NC-Nashville
Chemical Tank Truck Driver
Georgia-Pacific Chemicals, LLC
US-NC-Conway
Facility Maintenance Tech-Mechanical
Keywords:
City or Zip:
Hot Deals View All »
Triangle Member Newspapers: The News & Observer | The Chapel Hill News | The Cary News | The Durham News | Eastern Wake News | The Herald | North Raleigh News
© Copyright 2012, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Parental Consent | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | AdvertisingHosting Partners of
newsobserver.com
Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
5
6
Acceller, Inc.ADT Authorized DealerB.H.C. AutomotiveCommunity Business MarketplaceCommunity Family MedicineDebnam Ace HardwareEast Wake Animal HospitalEast Wake FurnitureFantastic Tires & Wheels Inc.Granite TransformationsIn Loving Memory of Mary (Malu) LaugheryiOn My SleepJ.Y. Monk Real Estate SchoolJulian S. Drew, DDSLife Alert
Eastern Wake News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 3 of 4
8/16/2012http://www.easternwakenews.com/2012/08/15/19289/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Register / Log In
High:
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Low:
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35.0
°
5-Day Forecast
Site Search
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newsobserver Home / News / newsobserver
Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco
BY BRUCE SICELOFF,
As they boarded the inaugural flight of a United
Airlines nonstop jet from Raleigh-Durham
International Airport to San Francisco on
Wednesday morning, Triangle travelers
thought about the airports they would avoid –
for a change – on their trip to the West Coast.
“This is great,” said Joe Freddoso, president of
MCNC, a Triangle-based technology nonprofit.
“I love Dallas-Fort Worth, but I like overflying it,
too.”
Thirteen-year-old Jacob Trubey of Cary was
about to fly on his own, for the first time.
“His aunt’s been after him since fourth grade to
come out there to San Francisco,” said his
mother, Laura. But she had never been
comfortable with the idea of Jacob changing
planes in some big airport between here and
there.
“The fact that I can bring him here and she can
pick him up there makes it a lot easier,” Trubey
said.
RDU has struggled for years to establish a
nonstop link to the West Coast.
United expressed interest in a San Francisco
flight in 2000. Midway Airlines tried nonstops to
Los Angeles and San Jose between 1997 and
2001.Delta flies to Los Angeles three evenings
a week during the warmer months, with a
service that has switched on and off several
times since 2008.
The new United flight gets business travelers
to the San Francisco Bay area before lunchtime.
“It’s a substantial difference, because time is
critical,” said Peter Bourne, president of
Durham-based Spring Metrics, a startup
software firm with 10 employees. “The ability to
get out there and still get in a full day of
business, opposed to spending the entire day
in the Chicago airport or Dulles, is super.”
Bourne said he’ll be meeting with investors and
prospective partners in the Bay area.
Gov. Bev Perdue led an economic development
delegation to San Francisco, and she will host
business executives and investors at a
reception Thursday night. Before she boarded
the flight Wednesday morning, she recalled a
West Coast meeting 18 months ago, where
venture capital fund managers complained that
traveling to RDU was too much trouble.
“They said, ‘You know, we’ve got a better way
to spend our week,’” Perdue said. “‘And unless
you all can adapt to our culture, unless you can
figure out a way to get us from here to there in
a day, then we’re not going to be as interested
in North Carolina.’”
Cisco Systems, which has 5,000 workers in
Research Triangle Park, is the biggest Triangle
employer with a home base in the Bay area.
Glenn Schleicher, a senior technical services
director for Cisco, makes the California trip six
or seven times a year.
He’ll be making a presentation at a panel
discussion Thursday morning at corporate
headquarters in San Jose.
“I’ve been at Cisco coming up on 20 years, and
it’s always been a pain to get to San Jose via a
connection,” Schleicher said, holding his
boarding pass and carry-on bag. “This cuts the
trip from a multihop ordeal to a direct flight.”
Also on board Wednesday was a Colorado man
who is something of a semi-professional air
traveler.
Daniel Palen publishes travel tips in the
“Friendly Skies” blog at upgrd.com, and he says
he logs 250,000 air miles a year. He flew from
his Denver home to San Francisco on Tuesday
to catch United’s first nonstop to RDU Tuesday
afternoon.
“They had a little gate party and some cake,”
Palen said. “And a poster we had everyone
sign.”
He flew into RDU Tuesday evening, slept a few
hours at an airport hotel, and was back in
Terminal 2 at 6 a.m. Wednesday for the return
trip.
“Just to earn the miles,” Palen said. United
travelers get credit for 2,400 miles each way.
“It was the inaugural flight. The fares were
decent. And I thought: Why not? It’s a pretty
good flight, pretty convenient,” Palen said.
United uses a Boeing 737-800, which seats
152 passengers, for its San Francisco flight.
Mark Arrington, United Airlines sales manager,
said at least 10 flights over the next two
weeks are already sold out.
Airport researchers say about 800 travelers fly
between RDU and the Bay area each day.
“So I’m confident we can keep this thing full,”
said Terry Yeargan, the RDU Airport Authority
chairman.
Siceloff: 919-829-4527 or
blogs.newsobserver.com/crosstown or
twitter.com/Road_Worrier/
Bonnie Wisler announces the boarding directions
for the inaugural flight of United Airlines non-
stop service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
Buy Photo
Jacob Trubey, 13, waits with his mom Laura
Trubey to board United Airlines' inaugural non-
stop flight from RDU to San Francisco on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. It was his first
time flying and he was traveling by himself to
see his aunt in San Francisco. "I wouldn't put
him on a flight where he had to make a
connection," Laura said. "I feel more
comfortable putting him on a direct flight."
Buy Photo
Tom Slavonia, 11, and his sister Mary Slavonia,
9, dance and wave goodbye to their
grandparents Bob and Mary Slavonia as they're
the first people to board United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
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Passengers wait for takeoff of United Airlines'
inaugural non-stop flight from RDU to San
Francisco on Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
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United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco gets a celebratory water
salute as it taxis for takeoff on Wednesday,
August 15, 2012.
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United Airlines' inaugural non-stop flight from
RDU to San Francisco taxis for takeoff on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012.
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Daniel Palen brought a poster along along to be
signed by the captain and flight crew for the
inaugural flight of United Airlines non-stop
service to San Francisco from RDU on
Wednesday, August 15, 2012. An aviation buff
who flies for work and fun, Palen, 21, lives in
Denver but flew to San Francisco the night
before in order to catch the inaugural flight from
there to Raleigh.
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The departure board advertises the inaugural
flight of United Airlines non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, August 15,
2012.
Buy Photo
A United Airlines plane gets ready for takeoff for
the company's inaugural non-stop service to San
Francisco from RDU on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
2012.
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Raleigh-Durham to San Francisco United Airlines
daily nonstop service. Departure: UA138 leaves
RDU 6:57 a.m., arrives SFO 9:43 a.m. PDT. Travel
time: 5 hours 46 minutes. Arrival: UA140 leaves
SFO 1:08 p.m. PDT, arrives RDU 9:18 p.m. Travel
time: 5 hours 10 minutes. Plane: Boeing 737-800,
seats 152 passengers. Price: Lowest round-trip fare
posted at united.com: $396.
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Published: Aug 15, 2012 12:34 PM
Modified: Aug 16, 2012 11:54 AM
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Eastern Wake News | Triangle travelers fill first nonstop flight to San Francisco Page 4 of 4
8/16/2012http://www.easternwakenews.com/2012/08/15/19289/triangle-travelers-fill-first.html