CAL ‘not ready’ for delayed Max 8 planes

| 12/02/2021 | 68 Comments
Cayman News Service
One of CAL’s Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft on a test flight on Thursday

(CNS): Cayman Airways Ltd (CAL) CEO Fabian Whorms has said the airline is not ready to take delivery of the two additional Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft, given the limited service it is currently running. With the short-term, and even medium-term, future of tourism uncertain, Whorms said CAL is in talks with Boeing over the delayed aircraft, now that the two planes it already has are finally ready to return to the skies.

Speaking at a press briefing on Wednesday, ahead of full test flights of the planes to Jamaica on Thursday morning, Whorms explained that the third Max 8 that CAL had leased should have been delivered more than 18 months ago. But given the circumstances surrounding the grounding of the aircraft, he appeared confident that the company has some leverage to say when it takes delivery of this third plane.

In the meantime, the Max 8s will be fully tested over the next few days and be back in service before the end of this month. This will pave the way for CAL to immediately offload the two aging Boeing 737-300 aircraft that have become costly to maintain.

Having the two Max 8s in the air will give the airline greater flexibility to handle the current limited passenger service and expand cargo operations. The aircraft’s ability to fly much further than the old 737s will also give the Department of Tourism room to adapt to new gateways as tourism reemerges later this year.

At the centre of the return of the aircraft is safety. Officials from the airline, including the pilots, have all stressed that they believe they are safe, given the scrutiny this aircraft has been given since it was universally grounded in the wake of two fatal crashes.

Whorms stressed that Cayman Airways voluntarily grounded these planes immediately after it became apparent that the two crashes had very similar causes. This, he said, is because safety, not profit, is the priority for Cayman’s National Flag carrier. He added that other airlines didn’t stop flying right away because people did not know what had caused the fatal crashes, which the CEO was the reason why CAL opted to ground the two aircraft it had.

But since then, the plane has been adapted and changed and put through is safety paces. In the meantime, CAL pilots have also been keeping up their training on these planes.


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Category: Business, Transport

Comments (68)

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  1. Anonymous says:

    when is aa coming back?
    they are 100 times better at everything than cal.

  2. Anonymous says:

    sell cal asap.
    conditions of sale:
    cayman flag must remain on planes
    all planes myust be made available for emergency airlift in times of hurricane.

  3. Anonymous says:

    I’m not ready either.

  4. Anonymous says:

    Wondering why in the midst of this Covid reset, (terrible phrasing… I get it but really it is a chance for us to reset our ideal new freedom), we could negotiate a partnership with delta or AA so that we are the ones flying in and out but with support from their staff. From what I understand planes have been sold off so why can’t we restructure a deal and make CAL profitable? I for one don’t think we should be letting the American way of doing business influence us. I think CAL is actually a wonderful airline if they could just sort out their delays and slow AF checking in.

  5. Anonymous says:

    CAL ‘not ready’ for delayed Max 8 planes
    Do I detect sarcasm in the headline?

    CAL’s planes are always delayed.

  6. Anonymous says:

    I would be very careful with that “impossible” word Fabian…!

    • Anonymous says:

      Especially when used in reference to the airline business. This is obviously Mr. Whorm’s first rodeo!

  7. Anonymous says:

    Just fix it like usual. Throw more money at it and milk it while it still lives. Future Caymanians will pay for it all.

    • Anonymous says:

      you have been saying that since 1965..try so go sit down..you will be the first one on it if you hear hurricane coming..

  8. Anonymous says:

    Moses disinformation bots already out again in full force. How’s the weather in Romania?

  9. Anonymous says:

    Plane ya wan, plane ya get! Tek dat! PAY UP!

  10. Anonymous says:

    “he appeared confident that the company has some leverage to say when it takes delivery of this third plane.” In other words we will just plead ignorant to the signed contract like usual.

    • Anonymous says:

      Why was that contract drafted so poorly in the beginning that CAL couldn’t get out of it… Look at the “deal” lawyers for CAL on that one… Comments were probably very light 🚦

    • Anonymous says:

      LOL. So we have no contractual right to defer taking delivery but he is confident we can use commercial leverage? What, the same commercial leverage that meant you could defer making lease payments on the delivered aircraft – NOT. How on earth do you think you can dodge have to start paying for the next one when you couldn’t stop paying for the last 2?

  11. Frequent Flyer says:

    Mr Whorms makes the somewhat obvious comment that “profit is not the priority for CAL”, we have all been painfully aware of that since the airline got started. No doubt they will take advantage of the extended range and simaltaneously take the opprtunity to incur more losses by flying the jets non stop from Miami to the Brac.

    • Anonymous says:

      Thats a fact

    • Anonymous says:

      So should he have said that profit not safety was the priority of CAL.

      Sometimes, I read these these comments and the idiocracy never ceases to amaze me.

      Do you think the President of American, United or Delta would make a statement that profit not safety is the priority for their airlines.

      Profit is good but without safety the public loses confidence

      • Anonymous says:

        Well its a known fact that kx is a drain on the economy and will never be profitable due to mismanagement and the lack of vision. Hopefully one day it will be a self-sustaining and profitable airline but one can only dream.

      • Kaya Now says:

        I suppose you meant idiocy 10:23

      • anon says:

        10.23am Who are you calling people idiots, American, united and Delta indeed all proritised safety but prior to Covid all were profitable as they operate in the real world. In Cayman there is a bottomless pit full of taxpayer’s dollars from which CAL help themselves every year without fail, profit is and never has been a target.

  12. Anonymous says:

    CAPA letter was not signed by Pilots…it was signed by the founder of Reopen Cayman, a real estate developer that flew for Cayman Airways a generation ago.

    • Anonymous says:

      Kel Thompson is a CURRENT First Officer with Cayman Airways, and the Chairman of the Safety Committee for CAPA.

      His position within Cayman Airways and CAPA affords him the right to sign the mentioned letter. The letter was cosigned by CAPAs President, Captain Gary Hydes.

      • Anonymous says:

        Did you know that some letters are factual and some are not? Who ya gonna believe?

      • Anonymous says:

        Does he pay the same respect to flying regulations as he does to planning regulations!

      • Anonymous says:

        Good God Kel’s the Chairman of the Safety Committee? Wasn’t he the one who couldn’t find the airport in one of the other Caribbean islsnds?

      • Anonymous says:

        The idea of flying in a Max 8 would be bad enough without the added dimension of it being piloted by a XXXX developer. If the founder of Reopen Cayman doesn’t understand that he should recuse himself from penning a testimonial that serves his narrative, then there is no hope for honesty in Cayman.

    • transparency is key says:

      Nothing you said was wrong, but it is important to point out that he’s once again, currently a pilot for CAL. Let’s not cherry pick which information we provide because it bolsters our narrative. Conveniently left out information can be almost as, if not more damaging than disinformation.

      Have a good weekend!

      • Anonymous says:

        You don’t even recognize the irony of your speaking about transparency and cherry-picking: nowhere in Kel’s letter does it mention he is commercially conflicted from giving impartial safety certification while simultaneously serving as the Founder of Reopen Cayman, an owner of Hotel property, friend of DoT minister Moses Kirkconnell, and a DoE cheating, CPA-colluding developer of GT waterfront. Now you’re going to tell us he’s got some kind of “honest-guy” reputation to protect? Or worse, that this deceitful senior citizen developer could be piloting our 737 MAX 8 flight?!?

    • Anonymous says:

      Blocking progression for younger pilots, only in cayman.

  13. Anonymous says:

    CNS..Shouldn’t this read, CAL not ready for “remaining” Max 8 planes..not sure that delayed is the right word..

    • Anonymous says:

      But they remain ‘Delayed’. Due to the various circumstances that we all know and acknowledge has kept the [ remaining ] planes grounded.

  14. Anonymous says:

    Cayman has spent >$20mln on these grounded planes. Think about that. Who would do that? $250K/mo/aircraft = $9mln a year and that’s before we start calculating the CAL staffing subsidy and reimbursing CIAA their serially unpaid landing fees. The Cayman public needs to see the truth of the lease agreements signed by Fabian Whorms and Moses K.

    • Anonymous says:

      As far as I understand not one airline has been paying for these aircraft due to the grounding of them through Boeing’s negligence. That is part of the reason that Boeing took such a financial hit themselves.

    • Anonymous says:

      How does that amount compare to the amount given to NAU to help out those in severe financial trouble because of Covid? For all those flag waving, CAL ca can do no wrong supporters think on that – $20m could have paid for a lot of food assistance and job retraining.

  15. Anonymous says:

    For one, I would not wish to ever fly in one of these planes. Is Boeing the ONLY manufacturer of aircraft?

  16. Anonymous says:

    But presumptuous to be saying tourism re-emerges later this year.

  17. Anonymous says:

    Who is?

  18. Anonymous says:

    As we are relying on they UK a great deal now shouldn’t CAL start s Cayman via Bermuda route that the 737 8 can easily do and stop our total reliance on BA

  19. Anonymous says:

    “Officials from the airline, including the pilots, have all stressed that they believe they are safe…”

    Being honest I don’t blame people for being skeptical, the same people now trying to say the planes are safe are the professionals who thought they were safe in the first place taking the word of Boeing an entity that exists only to make a profit instead of doing rigorous testing and oversight they should have done before approving them for commercial use

    It’s like

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