Grand Aire Express


Grand Aire Express was an American airline based in Swanton, Ohio, US. It operated passenger and cargo charter services, as well as charter management services. Its main base began in Monroe, Michigan and then moved to Toledo Express Airport, Toledo, Ohio. Grand Aire Express closed down/disestablished in June 2003; however, the parent company , is still in operation, providing and services from their world-headquarters at the Toledo Express Airport in Swanton, Ohio.

History

The airline was established in 1985 by Tahir Cheema. The company originally started out of Detroit Metro Airport in 1985 and quickly expanded from a one-airplane hangar operation to a larger operation in Monroe, MI. After five years based at Monroe, Michigan, Grand Aire Express moved to new corporate headquarters at Toledo Express Airport on 4 January 1999. After winning multiple awards with Air Cargo, Ernst Young Entrepreneurs, the State of Michigan Businesses and Ohio Businesses; Grand Aire Express closed down due to the post 9/11 airline and economy fallout.
Grand Aire Incorporated, separate from Grand Aire Express, is still in business as a provider of on-demand air charter services throughout North America which includes time-critical air charters worldwide, passenger air charters, FBO services at Toledo Express Airport, and cargo handling & trucking.

Fleet

As of May 18, 2009 Grand Aire Express no longer operates any aircraft, and closed down the business/disestablished shortly after.

Accreditation and awards

Questions regarding the safety of Grand Aire Express and lax oversight by the FAA came to light when the company moved its base of operations from Monroe Michigan to Toledo Ohio. From 1987 until early 1999 the Detroit FAA Flight Standards District Office held oversight responsibility for GAE while the operation was based in Michigan. However, when GAE moved its headquarters to Toledo in early 1999 the Cleveland Flight Standards District Office took over surveillance of the company. Prior to the company's move to Toledo, GAE held the belief that the Detroit FSDO would retain oversight responsibilities of the company. Grand Aire Express appeared to have maintained a close relationship with the Detroit FSDO, so much so, it eventually hired retired FAA personnel from that office to join the GAE management team.
At the beginning of 1999 the Cleveland FSDO began a much more thorough oversight program in comparison to the Detroit FSDO. By the middle of 1999 fines associated with regulatory violations by the company totaled over $750,000. Most of the violations dealt with the mechanical airworthiness of the company's aircraft. GAE began to complain about the close scrutiny they were receiving from the Cleveland FSDO and alleged this was based on racism because GAE President, Tahir Cheema, was Pakistani. The managers and inspectors at the Cleveland FSDO denied the allegation by Cheema. Walter Moor was one of the FAA Primary Operations Inspector over GAE while the certificate was supervised by the Cleveland FSDO. Moor told Cheema the Cleveland FSDO was simply following the “handbooks and regulations, and their job was to ensure that those requirements were met". Leroy Moore was the FAA manager of the Cleveland FSDO during this time period and stated, that “in Cleveland you had to follow the regulations” hinting that the Detroit FSDO had not been holding GAE to the rules.
Cheema took his complaints about the Cleveland FSDO to FAA headquarters in Washington DC and asked that the GAE certificate be returned to the Detroit FSDO. By April 2001, oversight of GAE was returned to the Detroit FSDO. The transfer of the certificate was alleged to have political undertones. John Hogan was another FAA Principle Operation Inspector over GAE while the certificate was supervised by the Cleveland FSDO. When asked about his recollection of the transfer of the GAE certificate, Hogan said Cheema was not happy with the way the Cleveland FSDO was handling Grand Aire, so Cheema put pressure on the FAA using his “political clout”. Hogan did not think the certificate should have been moved back to Detroit, but he said the FAA Regional headquarters made that decision.
Months before the GAE certificate was moved back to the Detroit FSDO, Cheema had contributed $5,000 to the Republican Party of Ohio. Additionally, Grand Aire Express contributed $5,000 to the Republican National State Elections Committee. Moreover, in October 2000, Cheema held enough political influence to convince the advisers of then Presidential Republican candidate, George W. Bush, to choose Cheema's hangar to host what would become one of Toledo's biggest political rallies for the eventual President.
The level of regulatory noncompliance discovered by the Cleveland FSDO, caused one FAA inspector to make a grim prediction. Ken Shauman, was the former FAA Primary Maintenance Inspector over GAE while the certificate was supervised by the Cleveland FSDO. In April 2001, prior to the transfer of the certificate to the Detroit FSDO, Shauman wrote: “This is not a safe, nor compliant motivated operation. All the indicators and comparison factors, predicting a major catastrophic event in this operator’s future, are glaringly evident”. Shauman's statement proved to be prophetic as the first of several fatal accidents occurred 15 months later on July 18, 2002 when the certificate was then overseen by the Detroit FSDO.

Incidents and accidents