Virgin America looks to win U.S. approval


Family at the swimming pool
Josh Roberts
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    Wannabe startup airline Virgin America, which was rebuffed by federal regulators late last year in its

    initial bid

    to earn clearance to begin operations, is changing its ownership mix in hopes of winning government approval.

    The airline has "changed agreements with minority owner Richard Branson's Virgin Group in an effort to meet U.S. ownership requirements,"

    reports

    Bloomberg News (via

    The Los Angeles Times

    ).

    The airline hopes this move will make it acceptable to U.S. regulators, who first denied the would-be carrier's operating license for having too much of a foreign ownership stake. Skeptics (OK,

    me

    ) have maintained all along that the real issue here is not foreign ownership so much as it is

    fear of competition

    from a certain

    cowardly domestic carrier

    and its ilk.

    And why wouldn't the U.S. airlines be afraid? If I were the kind of airline that thought

    eliminating free pretzels

    on domestic flights was a winning idea, I certainly wouldn't want to see another carrier enter the fray promising broadband access, nine-inch seatback TVs, interactive games, movies on demand, and a touch screen to order in-flight food.

    Then again, as a traveler I sure would welcome it.