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Vieques Air Link

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Vieques Air Link
IATA ICAO Call sign
V4 VES VIEQUES
Founded1965 (1965)
AOC #VLIA127A[1]
HubsAntonio Rivera Rodríguez Airport
Secondary hubsRoosevelt Roads Airport(TJRV), “Roosevelt Roads Aviation Services, LLC”
Focus citiesCPX, RVR, SIG, VQS
Fleet size11
Destinations4 Destinations Scheduled(SIG, VQS, RVR, CPX), other 4 Dest. have to be Charter Flights.
Parent companyBlue Water Air Charters, LLC
HeadquartersVIG Tower, Santurce, Puerto Rico
Key peopleCarlos Rodriguez
Employees29(Estimate)
Websiteviequesairlink.com
A Vieques Air Link Britten-Norman BN-2A Mk3-2 Trislander

Vieques Air Link (VAL, IATA code: V4) is a small VFR(Visual Flight Rules) Puerto Rico-based airline that operates under FAR Part 135, that links Vieques and Culebra with mainland Puerto Rico.

History

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Operations began during 1965, with owner Osvaldo "Val" Gonzalez-Duriex piloting a plane with three passengers from Vieques to Humacao. A Cherokee aircraft and another airplane were also acquired later, allowing the airline to serve Isla Verde International Airport.

In 1968, Vieques Air Link added a flight to St. Croix in the Virgin Islands.

In 1980 Fajardo Airport in Fajardo was built and Vieques Air Link started flights to the new airport immediately. In the 1980s the company increased the frequency of flights to San Juan, Humacao and Culebra. In 1989, Vieques Air Link lost its entire fleet to Hurricane Hugo. However, it soon acquired seven Britten-Norman Islanders and three Trislanders.

In the 1990s VAL got into financial trouble. However, with the Vieques conflict, more and more Puerto Ricans began flying Vieques Air Link every day to go to military camps to protest, and the police also had to fly their personnel and the people arrested in those areas on VAL planes at various times. Others, like political leaders Ruben Berrios and Fernando Martín, and the 2002 Miss Puerto Rico Carla Tricoli, who is a Viequense, have had pictures taken by the press aboard VAL planes while flying to Vieques, giving the airline a new wave of unpaid-for promotional attention. In addition, in June 2000, the airline made the cover of Islander News magazine, under the headline "Vieques Air Link: How To Survive a Hurricane", about the airline's fleet loss of 1989 and how it survived the potentially fatal financial disaster.[2]

In 2008, VAL added a new route between Antonio Rivera Rodríguez Airport (TJVQ) in Vieques and the new José Aponte de la Torre Airport (TJRV) at the former Roosevelt Roads Naval Base (NRR) in Ceiba, shortening the flight between Vieques and the Puerto Rican mainland to seven or eight minutes in a Britten-Norman Islander (BN2P), or Piper Cherokee (PA-32-260).

Destinations

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Vieques Air Link, Inc provides flights at the following locations:[3]

[Hub] Hub
[F] Future destination
[S] Seasonal
[T] Charter destinations
Scheduled Destinations
City Country IATA ICAO Airport Refs
Aguadilla, Puerto Rico  Puerto Rico BQN TJBQ Rafael Hernandez Airport [4]
Ceiba, Puerto Rico  Puerto Rico RVR TJRV José Aponte de la Torre Airport
Culebra  Puerto Rico CPX TJCP Benjamín Rivera Noriega Airport
San Juan  Puerto Rico SIG TJIG Isla Grande Airport
San Juan  Puerto Rico SJU TJSJ Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport
St. Croix  United States Virgin Islands STX TISX Henry E. Rohlsen Airport
St. Thomas, USVI  United States Virgin Islands STT TIST Cyril E. King Airport
Vieques  Puerto Rico VQS TJVQ Antonio Rivera Rodríguez Airport

Fleet

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Aircraft In fleet Notes
Piper PA-32 Cherokee Six 3 Passenger
Britten-Norman Islander 6 Passenger/Med Transport/Cargo
Britten-Norman Trislander 1 Cargo

Accidents and incidents

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  • On December 21, 1971, an Islander, N589JA, with 1 crew and 7 passengers crashed at Culebra airport. The aircraft bounced on landing. The pilot initiated a go-around over hills. The aircraft was unable to clear a house and crashed.
  • On December 19, 1977, an Islander, N862JA, crashed en route from St. Croix to Vieques when both engines stopped due to fuel exhaustion. The aircraft was ditched off Vieques. There were 9 passengers and a pilot on board. Five were killed and the aircraft was written off.
  • On January 26, 1980, a bomb was found on a Vieques Air Link plane that was about to be flown by Raul Mari Pesquera, son of Juan Mari Bras[5] (in Spanish).
  • On August 2, 1984, an Islander, N589SA, operating as Vieques Air Link Flight 901A, crashed on initial climb out of Vieques en route to St. Croix. The Islander was overloaded by 600–700 pounds when it departed Vieques. Also, its centre of gravity was up to 5 inches behind the aft limit. After takeoff the left engine lost power. It lost altitude, banked abruptly to the left, nosed down and crashed into the ocean. It appeared that the fuel had been contaminated with water. On board were the pilot and 8 passengers, all were killed.[6]
  • On September 21, 1989, the following Islanders were damaged beyond repair by Hurricane Hugo.
    • N112JC
    • N290VL
    • N457SA
  • On November 19, 1999, an Islander, N907VL, was damaged beyond repair at Anguilla Wallblake Airport by Hurricane Lenny.
  • On May 6, 2000, a Vieques Air Link pilot allegedly flew a company aircraft over Camp Garcia, a restricted US Navy area, on a scheduled flight an hour after protesters had been removed from the area by FBI agents and U.S. Marshals, resulting in the suspension of the pilot.[7]
  • On June 2, 2020, 2 people died and one was seriously injured when a Vieques Air Link Piper Aztec crashed against two sailboats at San Juan Bay. It's not clear which of the two San Juan airports the flight was heading to.[8] This marked the first incident involving fatalities for the airline in almost 36 years.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Federal Aviation Administration - Airline Certificate Information - Detail View". av-info.faa.gov. Retrieved June 27, 2019.
  2. ^ "BN Islander Historians 65 2000 June Vieques Air Link | eBay". Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 2, 2015.
  3. ^ "Vieques Air Link: Schedule". Archived from the original on February 15, 2012.
  4. ^ Suarez, Manuel (December 26, 1976). "What's Doing in PUERTO RICO". The New York Times.
  5. ^ http://despiertaboricua.tumblr.com/post/11521423866/lista-de-atentados-terroristas-hacia-puerto-rico [user-generated source]
  6. ^ "Aircraft Accident Report: Vieques Air Link, Inc., Britten-Norman BN-2A-6 Islander, N589SA. Vieques, Puerto Rico. August 2, 1984" (PDF). NTSB. September 27, 1985. Archived from the original on March 21, 2015. Retrieved July 21, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^ "Archives - Los Angeles Times". Los Angeles Times. May 7, 2000.
  8. ^ "2 dead after small plane crashes in waters near Puerto Rico". ABC News.
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