Salsa d'Haïti

SALSA d'Haïti
IATA ICAO Callsign
SO SLC SALSA
Founded 2008
Ceased operations 2013
Hubs

Toussaint Louverture International Airport

Hugo Chávez International Airport
Fleet size 1
Destinations 2
Headquarters Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Key people
Website flysalsa.com
A SALSA Beech99 registered HH-APA.

SALSA d'Haïti is a Haitian airline headquartered at Toussaint Louverture International Airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. It flies several round trip flights daily between Cap-Haitien and Port-au-Prince.

SALSA is an acronym for Services Aeriens Latinosamericains, S.A. d'Haïti (translated from French to English as "Latin American Air Services Corporation of Haiti").

SALSA d'Haïti holds the IATA airline designator of SO (Sierra-Oscar), IATA accounting prefix of 340 [1] and International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) airline designator of SLC (Sierra-Lima-Charlie). SALSA also participates in the International Air Transport Association (IATA) Multilateral Prorate Agency - Passenger (MPA-P) and is a signatory of the IATA Prorate Agency Agreement[2] (PAA).

In September 2011, SALSA d'Haïti was accepted as a member of the IATA Multilateral Interline Transport Agreement (MITA).

History

SALSA d'Haïti is a privately held airline formed in 2008 to provide service for travel within Haiti.

While the primary focus of the airline is to serve the Haitian local population, international expansion is planned to further this goal to the large Haitian population living outside of Haiti while at the same time making foreign tourist travel to areas outside of Port-au-Prince available.

Plans

SALSA has orders for additional turboprop aircraft to expand domestic operations to Port-de-Paix, Jérémie and Les Cayes. Additionally, jet-powered aircraft were to be added in 2011 to serve international destinations in Kingston, Jamaica and Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Airline cooperations

SALSA maintains interline or codeshare agreements with the several airlines.

Operations connect at Port-au-Prince where passengers must transfer from the international airport to the domestic airport for onward transportation to domestic destinations. SALSA provides complementary transportation between the Port-au-Prince international and domestic terminals.

2010 Haiti earthquake

Shortly after the 2010 Haiti earthquake on January 12, 2010, SALSA d'Haïti began organizing relief efforts with several non-governmental organizations and foreign governments to assist in the transportation of supplies into Port-au-Prince and other Haitian communities outside of the capital.

Relief flights were flown throughout Haiti, as well as supply flights from Santo Domingo, Aruba and Curacao. Charter flights for the Royal Dutch Marines, from their base in Willemstad, Curacao, were some of the first flights from outside the Haiti region.

Destinations

SALSA d'Haïti Destinations
City Country Airport
Port-au-PrinceHaiti HaitiToussaint Louverture International Airport
Cap-HaïtienHaiti HaitiHugo Chávez International Airport

Future destinations

SALSA d'Haïti Future Destinations
City Country Airport Notes
JacmelHaiti HaitiJacmel AirportNovember 2011
JérémieHaiti HaitiJérémie AirportNovember 2011
Les CayesHaiti HaitiAntoine-Simon AirportNovember 2011
Port-de-PaixHaiti HaitiPort-de-Paix AirportNovember 2011
KingstonJamaica JamaicaNorman Manley International AirportNovember 2011, Pending government approvals.
Santo DomingoDominican Republic Dominican RepublicLas Américas International AirportNovember 2011, Pending government approvals.

Fleet at point of Ceasing Operations

SALSA d'Haïti Fleet
Aircraft In Service Orders Passengers Delivery Date
British Aerospace Jetstream J31 1 2 19 2008

Former fleet aircraft

Former SALSA d'Haïti Aircraft
Aircraft Passengers Removed from Fleet
SAAB 340A[3] 30 2010
Beechcraft 99 12 2011
British Aerospace Jetstream J31 19 2013

Incidents and accidents

  • On February 13, 2011 a SALSA Jetstream 31 arriving in Port-au-Prince from Cap Haitien experienced issues with the left-wing landing gear locking into landing position due to a hydraulics system failure. After 30 minutes of attempting to drop the landing gear, the aircraft was forced to make an emergency landing with only two of the three wheels locked for landing. All 19 passengers and 2 crew members safely evacuated with minor injuries. The aircraft, HH-ANA, was significantly damaged.
  • On September 20, 2011 a SALSA Beechcraft 99 went down outside of Cap Haitien. 2 pilots and 1 passenger were on board at the time of the incident, there were no survivors. Authorities are currently investigating the cause.[4] This aircraft departed from Cap Haitien even though all but one passenger refused to go and other scheduled flights, including Tortug’Air, cancelled flights because of terrible weather conditions, between Cap Haitien and Port-au-Prince. Salsa flew into a violent cumulo nimbus shortly after take off and crashed.

References

  1. http://www.iata.org/publications/Pages/code-search.aspx
  2. http://www.iata.org/whatwedo/finance/Pages/proration.aspx
  3. "Photos: Saab 340A Aircraft Pictures". Airliners.net. 2010-06-15. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
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