Champion Air, which transports professional sports teams and vacation travelers, risks going out of business in 2008 unless it secures new investors and charter customers.
Champion CEO Lee Steele wrote in a recent letter to federal mediators that Champion foresees the loss of "all contract revenue" from current flying contracts by Aug. 31.
The Bloomington-based Champion is in the final months of its contract to fly 13 National Basketball Association teams. In addition, Northwest Airlines is phasing out Champion as a charter carrier for MLT Vacations, a Northwest subsidiary that markets air and hotel packages to leisure travelers. MLT represents about 70 percent of Champion's flying.
"The NBA contract ends in 2008 and will not be renewed due to Champion's inability to upgrade to newer aircraft," Steele wrote in an Oct. 4 letter to the National Mediation Board that was obtained by the Star Tribune.
The MLT and NBA business represents the vast majority of Champion's flying, with the rest coming from other charter flights.
Champion operates an aging fleet of 16 Boeing 727s, which require three-pilot crews. Ten planes are configured with 173 seats for leisure charters, while six planes have 59 seats for VIP trips, including NBA flying.
Steele implored the mediation board to place pilot contract talks on hold as he focuses on "seeking an investor who can be persuaded to finance a new fleet and a modified business plan."
He wrote: "The lower [post-bankruptcy] costs at Northwest, MLT's decision to shift its business away, the NBA's desire for newer aircraft, and the burden of maintaining and trying to market an aging and inefficient B727 fleet have created a perfect storm."