Ep. 6: The Weekend SNA Became “International”
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In 2002, Alaska Airlines tried to launch nonstop service from Vancouver to Santa Ana’s John Wayne Airport and accidentally discovered that “international” is not a vibe, it is a federal workflow. The plan sounded simple: passengers would clear US customs in Vancouver using preclearance, then arrive in Orange County like it was any other domestic flight. One tiny problem: SNA had no customs facilities and was not set up as an international arrival point for aircraft coming from a foreign origin, even if the people on board had already been processed.
Bianca and Tiffany break down how the route debuted in late April 2002 and then fell apart within days, with Alaska suspending flights over “compliance issues” tied to Customs and INS procedures. The episode turns into a wonderfully chaotic lesson in aviation bureaucracy: preclearance can solve passenger inspection, but it does not automatically grant an airport the legal ability to accept international arrivals, nor does it satisfy the need for CBP to retain enforcement options like spot inspections.
Along the way, they unpack the concept of landing rights airports, the post 9/11 security climate, and why this tiny Canada route instantly became political ammo in Orange County’s long-running airport debates. It is a comedy of errors, a predictable outcome, and a reminder that in aviation, the paperwork can hit harder than the weather.
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