Allegiant Air under fire after '60 Minutes' safety report

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The low-cost carrier Allegiant Air is under fire following a "60 Minutes" investigation that raised significant safety concerns.
Investigators with the news program found that between Jan. 1, 2016, and October 2017, the Las Vegas airline experienced more than 100 serious mechanical incidents, including aborted takeoffs, rapid descents, flight control malfunctions and midair engine failures.
The airline does not fly out of Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. Allegiant Air has limited flights out of St. Cloud, Fargo and Grand Forks.
From St. Cloud, it flies seasonally to Ft. Myers/Punta Gorda, Fla. and year-round to Phoenix. From Fargo, it flies seasonally to Tampa/St. Petersburg and year-round to Orlando, Los Angeles, Phoenix and Las Vegas. From Grand Forks, Allegiant flies seasonally to Orlando and year-round to Phoenix and Las Vegas.
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More than a year's worth of Federal Aviation Administration reports for Allegiant and seven other airlines show that the carrier was on average nearly three and a half times more likely to have a midair breakdown than Delta, United, American, Spirit or JetBlue.
Captain Eric Gust, vice president of operations at Allegiant, said in a prepared statement that "60 Minutes" aired a "false narrative about Allegiant and the FAA, which he said exercises "rigorous oversight" of the airline. Gust also said Allegiant complies with all FAA requirements and participates in numerous voluntary safety programs.
"To suggest that Allegiant would engage in the practice of asking team members to violate company and regulatory obligations is offensive and defamatory," he said.
Shares of parent company Allegiant Travel Co. slid 4.6 percent in early trading.