NEGOTIATION OF AIRLINE USE & LEASE AGREEMENTS

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Transcription:

34 th Annual Basics of Airport Law Workshop and 2018 Legal Update Session #5 NEGOTIATION OF AIRLINE USE & LEASE AGREEMENTS Joseph Messina, Esq. Philadelphia International Airport Eric T. Smith, Esq. Kaplan Kirsch & Rockwell, LLP

SESSION OVERVIEW Introduction Basic Overview Legal Underpinnings Potential Rate-Setting Methodologies Components Contained Within Methodologies The Hit List Frequent & Significant Issues War Stories / Lawyer Therapy Session Wrap Up & Questions Questions OK! Huh & What does THAT mean?????? 2

PLANNING & THE NEGOTIATION PROCESS When should an airport start the process? What IS the process? The role of the airport attorney. Don t go it alone consultants and special counsel. The best laid plans 3

THE BASICS What are we really talking about? Rates & Charges for Privilege of Using Airport Landing Fees, Terminal Use (Holdrooms, Common Areas, Exclusive Use Areas), Other Do you really NEED a contract? What DO you REALLY Need? The Rate-Setting Methodology Recipes and Main Courses May Vary but 4

AIRPORT-AIRLINE BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP AIRLINE AGREEMENTS Establish what airlines can do at airport and what airport is obliged to do for airlines Airline payments Costs in rate base and cost center structure Rents, fees, and charges calculation methodologies Airline role in capital decisions and consultation Control over and use of gates and facilities Other provisions: affiliates, insurance, environmental, etc. PRIMARY Negotiation FACILITY CONTROL AIRLINE PAYMENTS CAPITAL PROGRAM CONTROL 4

OBLIGATORY LEGAL STUFF Quite a bit of legal underpinnings Grant Assurances Federal legislation FAA policy FAA decisions Court decisions Remember, this is just Rates & Charges 101! 6

LET S SCARE THE ATTENDEES...

GRANT ASSURANCES Grant Assurance 5: Preserving Rights and Powers Grant Assurance 19: Operation and Maintenance Grant Assurance 20: Hazard Removal and Mitigation Grant Assurance 21: Compatible Land Use Grant Assurance 22: Economic Nondiscrimination (Aeronautical Only) Grant Assurance 23: Exclusive Rights (Aeronautical Only) Grant Assurance 24: Fee and Rental Structure Grant Assurance 25: Airport Revenues Grant Assurance 29: Airport Layout Plan Grant Assurance 31: Disposal of Land And FAA Rates & Charges Policy And 49 U.S.C. 47129 And Case Law (FAA and Courts 8

DISTILLING IT ALL DOWN: CORE PRINCIPLES Exclusive use Competition / Access Reasonable terms without unjust discrimination Residual terminal methodology by agreement only 9

DRILLING DOWN: VARIATIONS ON TWO BROAD PARADIGMS Let s keep oversimplifying things...... but not for too much longer! 10

RATES & CHARGES METHODOLOGY 01 02 03 Residual Residual Compensatory Hybrids Recover net costs after credit of nonairline revenues Financial risk transferred to airlines Usually requires airline approval on capital investment decisions Limited accumulation of airport equity Recover only those costs allocated to occupied facilities Airport assumes financial risk Only pay for what you use Airport keeps nonairline revenues Mixture of both methodologies Balance of risk and facility control Carve outs of self-supporting cost centers Net revenue-sharing formulas (usually in return for safety nets ) 11

Airline Payments AIRPORT-AIRLINE BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP BALANCING AIRPORT AND AIRLINE OBJECTIVES Airport Objectives Compromise Airline Objectives Recover all costs Generate adequate discretionary cash flow Trend toward compensatory agreements Financial incentives for cost control Stabilize rates Establish rates by formula Minimize costs Provide adequate reserves Meet debt obligations Minimize bankruptcy risk Extraordinary coverage protection Avoid paying costs of others 12

Other Facility Capital AIRLINE PAYMENTS AIRPORT-AIRLINE BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP BALANCING AIRPORT AND AIRLINE OBJECTIVES Airport Objectives Compromise Airline Objectives Airport Objectives Compromise Airline Objectives Control over capital improvements (no MII) Control over facilities (common use) Recover all costs Generate adequate discretionary cash flow Provide adequate reserves Meet debt obligations Minimize bankruptcy risk Promote air service Attract new entrants Historical agreement and relationships Triggers for capital construction Trend toward compensatory agreements Preferential use with accommodation and recapture provisions Financial incentives for cost control Equitable treatment of all airline Extraordinary coverage protection Identify needed changes Control over capital improvements (strong MII) Stabilize rates Establish rates by formula Control over facilities (exclusive use) Minimize costs Preferential treatment of Avoid incumbents paying costs of others Historical agreement and relationships 13

COMPONENTS OF A RATE-SETTING METHODOLOGY 14

BUILDING BLOCKS FOR AGREEMENT Cost centers Cost center allocations Terminal space inventory Capital program and sources of funding 15

BUILDING BLOCKS FOR AGREEMENT TYPICAL AIRPORT COST CENTERS Cost Center Terminal Other Buildings & Grounds Cargo Airfield Parking & Roadways Reliever Airport General & Administrative Spaces Included Passenger terminal buildings, baggage claim, loading bridges Airline and GA hangars, fueling facilities, other land/building leases Airline freight, express, and mail handling facilities Areas for aircraft landing, taking-off, taxiing, safety areas, and parking; terminal and cargo apron areas Short term, long term, and shuttle parking areas; rental car facilities; airport access roads General aviation reliever Indirect expenses allocated to other cost centers 16

BUILDING BLOCKS FOR AGREEMENT COST CENTER ALLOCATIONS What are you allocating? Operating O&M expenses Equipment and capital outlays Bad debt, assessments, settlements, judgments Capital Debt service and coverage Amortization of investments Net of grants and PFCs Reserves Debt service O&M Renewal & replacement How are you allocating it? Ensure cost recovery Connect charges with use Basis for allocating costs Activity Accounting system with time card records or work orders... or management judgment Allocating indirect expenses Direct expenses 50% revenues/ 50% direct expenses Negotiated percentages... or management judgment 17

UNDERSTAND YOUR COST CENTERS AIRLINE Airfield Area Terminal Complex Ticket Counters International Facilities Baggage Claim Baggage System Airport Owned? Airline Owned? Conventional Automated Transit System/People Mover Airline Tenant Finishes and Equipment Landside Terminal Loading bridges Airport vs. Airline owned Concourse Ramp Area Fueling System NON-AIRLINE Rental Car Facilities Concessions Public Parking Area Employee Parking Area Commercial Vehicle Facilities Cargo Area Airline Maintenance/Support Areas Tenant Leased Land Airport Maintenance General Aviation Airport Mail Facility Airport Hotel 18

PLACING IT ALL IN CONTEXT 19

AIRPORT LEGAL/FINANCIAL FRAMEWORK Financial Framework Capital Markets: Bondholders Rating agencies Credit and liquidity providers Bond Ordinance / Resolution / Trust Indenture Signatory air carriers Nonsignatory air carriers Air cargo carriers Airline Use and Lease Agreement Congress FAA/DOT TSA NTSB NEPA OSHA Federal Grants Federal Regulations and Policies Sponsor Assurances Airport Operator Generally accepted accounting principles State government County or local government Governing board or authority Authorizing Legislation Merchants/vendors Car rental franchises Taxi/limo operators Parking garage operators Fixed-based operators Concession / Operating Agreements and Permits 20

UNDERSTAND YOUR PLAYING FIELD Limitations: what are your fixed elements? i.e., those things that you can t change Legal: Federal Law, Bond Ordinances, Existing Agreements Physical: Built space, projects under construction. Survey rentable space and needs of airlines. Financial: Flow of funds, PFCs, Debt Service, Bond Reserves, Bond Covenants 21

AIRPORT LAWYER S MOTTO? 22

AIRPORT-AIRLINE BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP RATES BY ORDINANCE Without an airline agreement, airline fees set by rate ordinance, resolution, regulation, or tariff Governed by DOT Rates and Charges Policy and case law Endeavor to be self-sustaining Rates are reasonable and not unjustly discriminatory Airport proprietor may not require airlines to cover losses generated by nonaeronautical facilities Cost allocation must comply with DOT rules, for example: Aeronautical users shouldn t pay costs properly allocable to other users or groups Aeronautical cost-based fees may not exceed the costs properly allocated to those users Roadway costs can be allocated back to other cost centers 23

NUTS & BOLTS SELECT HOT TOPICS Survey of things your super-annuated speakers have had to deal with during their distinguished and long careers 24

RATES & CHARGES METHODOLOGY TRENDS Term of Agreements Away from residual cost rate-making toward compensatory and hybrid methods Increased use of activity-based rates Establishment of cost recovery security fees (security checkpoint, EDS space, exit lane staffing, etc.) International / Open Skys 25

COMMON USE ISSUES Changing times = new challenge Sponsor obligation to make airport available to all Legal standard If you have seen one airport 26

CAPITAL PROJECT CONTROL Airline approval/disapproval rights vary: None Airport doing project at all Including project costs in airline rates and charges Issuing bonds for project Certain types of projects Many airports have obtained pre-approval for capital programs in their agreements Majority-in-interest (MII) of airlines represent a majority of passengers, landed weight, or payments to airport 27

FACILITY CONTROL What control does the airport have over space? Gates? Ticket counters? Access to baggage, fuel, ground services? Ability of existing carrier to expand? New entrant carrier access? 28

FACILITY CONTROL UNDERSTAND YOUR FACILITY Types of Space from Public to Private Terminal: Public Areas: Common use or joint use: Costs that can be prorated according to amount of use (# of bags or passengers). Preferential use: Airline has right of first use but may have to share. Airport retains right to allow other airlines to use the area to the extent such other use does not infringe on the Airline s preferential use as herein defined. Exclusive Use: Traditional leasehold areas that are exclusively used by the Airline. 29

FACILITY CONTROL Lease Type Description Example Types of Space Exclusive Preferential Joint Common Exclusive right to use First right, airport may assign others if not in use Extraordinary coverage protection Airport assigns Ticket counter, back office, clubrooms Gates, holdrooms Avoid paying costs of others Circulation, restrooms What is granted to an airline and what rights are retained by the airport is very important. 30

FACILITY CONTROL USE-IT-OR-LOSE-IT AND ACCOMMODATION If an airline isn t using the space efficiently and someone else needs it, airport can take it back Thresholds in airline agreements range from: Ex. 3 to 7 turns per gate per day Airport-wide average utilization Primarily applies to gates, but some agreements have similar provisions for ticket counters and associated office space Accommodation provisions Ability to reallocate space at select intervals Ability to force sharing A note about competition plans, PFCs, and Grant Assurances 31

FACILITY CONTROL TRENDS Recent agreements trend toward preferential use Optimize facility use and reduce capital needs PFC funds only for preferential/common use space or exclusive use space with lease less than 5 years Preserving the flexibility to reallocate or reassign exclusive use space to accommodate changing mix of airlines and market shares Reservation by airport of common use gates Move toward common use terminal systems 32

OTHER CONSIDERATIONS AFFILIATE AIRLINES Affiliate definitions include: Wholly-owned subsidiaries All seats sold in the name of signatory airline Operates under the same trade name and uses essentially the same livery Airlines with a code sharing agreement Typically require affiliates and signatory to formally declare relationship Affiliates typically do not sign the airline agreement 33

OTHER CONSIDERATIONS ENVIRONMENTAL & INSURANCE Often most time-consuming section of airline agreement to negotiate Establishes: Types and amounts of insurance airlines must have to operate at Airport Indemnity provisions a VERY important risk-containment method for airports Environmental procedures, audits, and compliance Not only negotiating with airline property reps, but their legal counsel as well 34

PER TURN FEES Big 4 (or maybe 3) appear to have declared war Wide variety of potential iterations The CPE argument likely to be proffered by legacy carriers Perspective and insight of the battle-worn 35

IF THINGS DON T GO SO WELL Rocket Docket FAA Route Part 13 Part 16 Limbo 36

OTHER CONSIDERATIONS AIRLINE BANKRUPTCY Airline bankruptcies have become a regular occurrence in post 9/11 era Hope for best, but plan for worst Impact of bankruptcies and airline consolidation over past 10 years Crystal ball says 37

CONCLUSION / QUESTIONS Eric T. Smith esmith@kaplankirsch.com Joseph Messina Joseph.messina@phl.org ATTORNEY ADVERTISEMENT. The contents of this presentation, current at the date of publication, are for reference purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. The contents do not reflect the official opinion of Kaplan Kirsch & Rockwell LLP. Responsibility for the information and views expressed within this document lies entirely with the author(s). 2018 Kaplan Kirsch & Rockwell LLP