Alaska Airlines And Hawaiian Airlines Merger Travel Perks

The merger between Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines is official, making it possible to share loyalty benefits between both carriers. There are several changes for travelers to know about, although they are not as drastic as previous mergers, allowing air passengers to enjoy their favorite loyalty perks.

Two Separate Airlines
While Alaska Airlines is buying Hawaiian, they remain two distinct platforms and loyalty programs during the interim period as the Biden Administration just approved the merger request.

For the next 18 months, they will operate as separate brands while the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reviews the single operating certificate application to integrate the booking system so you can still enjoy your Alaska Mileage Plan or HawaiianMiles membership.

The Alaska Airlines and Hawaiian Airlines websites and apps continue working for leisure and business travel. More program updates will become available in 2025.

Typically, airline mergers result in the acquired airline absorbing into its new parent company. Hence, why there are only a handful of U.S.-based carriers compared to a couple of decades ago.
“This is a historic day for Alaska Airlines as we officially join with Hawaiian Airlines. Alaska and Hawaiian share tremendous pride in connecting communities with award-winning service, and we look forward to inviting more guests on board to experience what makes both brands unique,” says Ben Minicucci, CEO of Alaska Air Group.

Other fun statistics regarding the new Alaska-Hawaiian service area include:

Nearly 1,500 daily flights
141 direct destinations, including 29 international markets
Over 1,200 destinations through oneworld and global partners
A fleet consisting of over 350 aircraft
Hubs in Seattle, Honolulu, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland and San Diego

Seattle and Honolulu are the most prominent hubs, which makes this alliance an excellent option for traveling to the Pacific Coast and Hawaii at a competitive cost.

Free Mileage Transfers
Until a future loyalty program is announced, Alaska and Hawaiian members can transfer miles at a 1:1 ratio between linked accounts free of charge. This transfer feature will start soon and existing members will receive more details once this capability is activated.

Elite Status Match
Later in 2024, elite members can link their loyalty accounts and enjoy a status match. People with elite status with both programs will get a status upgrade, such as getting Pualani Platinum and MVP Gold when you already have Pualani Gold and MVP status, respectively.
A status comparison chart highlights how this match will work.
Purchase Flights with Both Airlines
Another upcoming perk is the ability to purchase Hawaiian Airlines flights on alaskaair.com or Alaska Airlines flights on hawaiianairlines.com.
Travelers will also experience a better digital experience on both carriers’ websites and apps as the merger finalizes.
Shared Airport Lounge Access
For now, each airline’s lounge networks remain separate but it’s possible to enjoy reciprocal benefits when flying on the other airline.
Alaska Lounge members can access Alaska-operated lounges when flying on Hawaiian. Conversely, Hawaiian Airlines Premier Club members can purchase a single-day pass to visit an Alaska Lounge when flying on either airline.
Huaka‘i by Hawaiian
Exclusively for Hawaii residents, this brand-new program offers exclusive inter-island travel benefits, such as 10% off one booking per quarter and a free checked bag. There will also be special deals and offers just for participants.
Final Thoughts
This is an exciting merger between two of the best airlines for award travel. Maintaining two distinct brands with upcoming free point transfers and elite status matches makes maximizing this relationship easy. Look for more changes over the next 18 months.
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Keith Raffel: Right and left want to cancel books they don’t like

Both the right and the left are waging a war against books.The right is focusing on schools. According to a PEN America analysis, there were 4,349 instances of U.S. schools banning books in the second half of last year. Utah has banned books by beloved children’s author Judy Blume.Under an Arkansas statute passed last year and currently being challenged in the courts, teachers and librarians can be sent to prison for “furnishing a harmful item to a minor.” Red states Indiana, Missouri, Oklahoma and Tennessee have also passed such legislation. More than a dozen other mostly red states have similar bills under consideration.

Speaking of the law in his state, Keith Gambill, president of the teachers union in Indiana, told the Washington Post, “It will make sure the only literature students are exposed to fits into a narrow scope of what some people want the world to look like. … We are entering a very frightening period.”Progressives are fighting the bans. For example, the authors’ organization PEN America, which says it stands for protection of “free expression in the United States and worldwide” joined with parents, students and publishers to sue a Florida school board. Their action maintains books were removed from library shelves “based on an ideologically driven campaign to push certain ideas out of schools” in violation of the First Amendment.Yet while PEN America fights book bans in schools, its members are advocating the suppression of authors based on their political views. Over 1,000 authors signed an open letter dated Feb. 3 that condemned PEN America for sponsoring a conversation between comedian Moshe Kasher and actor Mayim Bialik, who is on the record for believing that “Israel as a homeland for Jews has a right to exist.” In its sponsorship, the letter continued, PEN is “offering tacit approval for the Zionist, racist and genocidal regime.”Both presidential nominees have expressed support for Israel’s right to protect itself against the terrorist Hamas organization, which murdered over 1,200 people and which, according to the U.N., also committed “rape and gang rape” in its Oct. 7, 2023 attack. Harvard professor and bestselling author Steven Pinker, who wrote a chapter on genocide in his “Better Angels of Our Nature,” tweeted, “What Israel is doing may be criticized, but it is in no way ‘genocide’; this is a blood libel.”

Last May, @moyurireads on X published a spreadsheet classifying 200 authors according to her shaky take on whether the author is pro- or anti-Zionist. The list, which garnered over a million views within a few days of the posting, recommended books by alleged pro-Zionist authors not be “purchased or promoted on social platforms.” Taylor Jenkins Reid, author of “Daisy Jones and the Six,” should be shunned for posting a photo of a Hamas hostage’s father who says, “I want there to be peace, but I also want my daughter to return.”Chicago bookstore City Lit Books removed “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow,” one of the 100 best books of the century according to the New York Times, as a potential choice for its monthly book club. According to a news report, assistant manager Charlie Schumann wrote to members, “It was brought to my attention that the author Gabrielle Zevin is a Zionist and I am not comfortable having us reading something by her, especially knowing people would buy it from the store and she would receive monetary support from us.”So where are we now? Red state legislatures want to ban children’s access to books based on their version of what’s harmful, not that of professional librarians and teachers. Members of the McCarthyite left call for boycotts of authors who do not support their views on the Hamas-Israel war.So where am I amid all this furor? I don’t support either side. As in the classic 1972 song by Steelers Wheel, I am “stuck in the middle” with “clowns to the left of me” and “jokers to the right.”When it comes to school libraries, I’m with Judy Blume, who said, “Let children read whatever they want and then talk about it with them. If parents and kids can talk together, we won’t have as much censorship because we won’t have as much fear.”When it comes to banning and shunning books based on who wrote them, I’m with President John Kennedy, who said, “We must know all the facts and hear all the alternatives and listen to all the criticisms. Let us welcome controversial books and controversial authors.”I stand for free expression.

RBI Lifts Ban On IIFL Finance’s Gold Loan Business

IIFL Finance To raise ₹1,272 Crore Via Rights Issue | Image: IIFL Finance (Representative)

IIFL Finance Limited on Thursday (September 19) through an exchange filing announced that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has lifted the restrictions imposed on the company’s gold loan business, As per the regulatory filing, the company added that these restrictions, which had been in place since March 4, 2024, prevented the company from sanctioning, disbursing, or assigning/securitising its gold loans. With the RBI’s new communication dated September 19, 2024, IIFL Finance can now fully resume its gold loan operations.”The RBI’s decision is effective immediately and allows the Company to resume the sanctioning, disbursal, assignment, securitization, and sale of gold loans in compliance with all relevant laws and regulations,” added the company in the regulatory filing. In response to the RBI’s decision, IIFL Finance has assured that all their future gold loan operations will comply with regulatory standards.

“The Company is committed to upholding the highest standards of compliance and will continue to ensure that the remedial actions taken are sustained,” added the company in the BSE exchange filing.
Share performanceThe shares of the company ended the day on a red note today.
IIFL share performance | IIFL Finance Ltd shares opened at Rs 531.00 today, reaching a high of Rs 533.90 and touching a low of Rs 482.00 during trading hours.The company’s current market capitalisation stands at Rs 21,080 crore, with a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 12.36. Investors can expect a dividend yield of 0.78 per cent. Over the past year, the stock has seen a 52-week high of Rs 683.19 and a 52-week low of Rs 304.25, markinhg a significant price fluctuations in the market.

Warwickshire homebuilder highlights mental health awareness with book donation to local school

Watch more of our videos on ShotsTV.com and on Freeview 262 or Freely 565Visit Shots! nowLuxury homebuilder Mulberry Homes has donated mental health books to a primary school in Houlton, Rugby, to highlight Youth Mental Health Day on 19th September.Houlton St Gabriel’s CofE Academy, which is just one and a half miles away from the homebuilder’s Mulberry Homes at Houlton development, received a bundle of books which tackle sensitive subjects including emotions and grief. A spokesperson at Houlton St Gabriel’s CofE, said: “We are very grateful to Mulberry Homes for this donation. Children’s mental health is massively important, and these books are a great entry point for our children to speak about their feelings.” Youth Mental Health Day is aimed to encourage an open dialogue between young people about their mental health and any struggles they may be facing. The awareness day aims to break down the stigma surrounding mental health. Use the ‘Submit a Story’ link to tell us your news.Kerry Jones, Sales and Marketing Director at Mulberry Homes, said: “We are delighted to have supported Houlton St Gabriel’s CofE this Youth Mental Health Day. With our donation, we hope to encourage an open discussion about how children feel and their mental health.” Established in 2011 and based in Warwickshire, Mulberry Homes is a medium housebuilder that provides quality properties across the wider midlands and southern counties. It specialises in individual and exclusive developments with their own looks and personalities and builds traditional homes with modern layouts. Continue Reading

Europe is bidding a steady farewell to passport-free travel

Staring out over France and Germany from the vine-covered hills of Schengen, a village at the southern tip of Luxembourg, it is hard to tell where one country ends and the other begins. That is in no small part thanks to a deal signed there in 1985, which committed the Benelux countries, France and Germany to abolish the frontiers separating them. The Schengen passport-free travel area has since grown to include most of the 450m citizens of the European Union’s 27 countries, and some neighbours too. Keen to capture the mysterious essence of Euro-federalism, a trickle of tourists still flock to the village where it all started, as Charlemagne did this week. Alas, visitors face three kinds of disappointment. First, a museum celebrating the agreement is currently under renovation. Second, the village has turned into a Saudi prince’s fantasy: with just a few hundred inhabitants, it has eight sprawling petrol stations in its vicinity, serving motorists keen to fill their tanks before leaving low-tax Luxembourg. Finally, and most distressingly, the freedom of travel that put the place on the map is steadily being chipped away. A symbol of the EU’s success at bringing countries together risks succumbing to reinvigorated nationalism across the bloc.