1989 alteration proposal The Wright Amendment became controversial in Dallas; some argued that it unfairly restricted airline competition by discouraging carriers other than Southwest from serving Love Field, while others supported it to mitigate jet noise and protect property values near the airport. By late 1989,
Dallas City Council member Jerry Bartos emerged as a leader of the effort to repeal Wright, gaining the backing of mayor
Annette Strauss, and
Kansas U.S. House Rep.
Dan Glickman sponsored a bill calling for the amendment's repeal. In September of that year, the Dallas City Council approved a compromise resolution calling for the amendment's four-state limit to be changed to a perimeter limit allowing direct flights to
Denver and
Nashville. By 1990, Southwest was supportive of the resolution, but it had galvanized opposition by local property owners, and DFW Airport supporters were alarmed by a declaration by
American Airlines that it could cancel a proposed terminal project there and move many flights to Love. In early July, Texas members of the
U.S. House Rules Committee blocked Glickman's bill, Strauss withdrew her support, and the City Council rescinded their 1989 vote.
Legend Airlines and Shelby Amendment In 1996, Dallas aviation company Dalfort Aviation announced the launch of
Legend Airlines, a new air carrier that would operate long-range flights from Love Field using jets with 56 seats—the maximum number allowed for long-haul flights under Wright. The new airline would be headed by
T. Allan McArtor and would use refurbished
McDonnell Douglas DC-9s or
Boeing 727s—aircraft that normally carried 90 or more passengers—with an all-
first class configuration and the excess space used for cargo. McArtor and Dalfort chief executive Bruce Leadbetter claimed that buying new
regional jets with 56 or fewer seats was too expensive and would not provide Dalfort with much-needed overhaul business. However, the USDOT general counsel ruled in September 1996 that the 56-seat restriction applied to the "designed capacity" of an airliner rather than to the number of seats actually installed, prompting Legend to seek a change in the law; Texas Rep.
Joe Barton was soon calling for the U.S. House to address the 56-seat requirement. By July 1997, McArtor had enlisted the help of Senator
Richard Shelby of Alabama, who proposed to change to Wright restrictions to allow Legend to start service using the refurbished planes; however, he was opposed by Texas senator
Kay Bailey Hutchison. On 7 October 1997, despite fierce opposition from Hutchison and Rep.
Kay Granger of Fort Worth, Shelby's efforts culminated in the passage of a Senate funding bill that included his amendment to allow unrestricted flights to
Alabama,
Kansas, and
Mississippi and to allow nationwide flights using aircraft reconfigured with 56 seats. On 9 October 1997, the U.S. House overwhelmingly approved the transportation funding bill containing the Shelby Amendment, with President
Bill Clinton expected to promptly sign it into law.
Legal actions The passage of the Shelby Amendment prompted a flurry of lawsuits. Within a month, Fort Worth and Dallas had sued each other, with Fort Worth arguing for upholding the 1968 bond agreement and Dallas arguing that it could no longer be enforced. A few months later, American Airlines joined Fort Worth in suing Dallas, and McArtor accused American of masterminding Fort Worth's original lawsuit to attain American's goal of stopping Legend. By February 1998,
Mesa Airlines, which had begun intrastate service from Meacham Field in May 1997, had joined Fort Worth, and Southwest Airlines joined the Dallas lawsuit at the behest of Legend. On 19 May 1998, Continental Airlines—a party to the original 1968 bond agreement—and its regional affiliate
Continental Express sued both cities over their refusal to allow interstate service at Love Field using 50-seat
Embraer ERJ-145s, which fit within the 56-seat restriction. The lawsuit argued that the cities no longer had the authority to block long-haul service that complied with federal law. This in turn prompted DFW Airport to preemptively sue American Airlines to prevent them from likewise operating from Love, even though the airline denied having plans to do so. McArtor argued that Fort Worth was also violating the bond agreement by allowing Mesa and
FedEx Express to operate from Meacham and the recently constructed
Fort Worth Alliance Airport respectively. However, State District Judge Bob McCoy dismissed the suit later that month on the grounds that Legend was not a party to the 1968 DFW bond agreement and thus lacked
standing to sue.
New service starts Dallas and Fort Worth's efforts to block Continental Express were unsuccessful; the carrier began intrastate flights between Love Field and
George Bush Intercontinental Airport in
Houston on 11 June 1998, becoming only the third airline to start new service at Love after the 1968 bond agreement, following Southwest and the defunct
Muse Air. On 10 February 2000, a federal judge lifted an injunction against the airline's proposed interstate service to
Cleveland, and the airline announced that the service would begin on 1 June. On 5 April 2000, after further legal battles against Fort Worth and American Airlines and delays in gaining final approval from the FAA, Legend began the first long-haul service from Love Field since 1974 with a flight to
Washington Dulles International Airport in a refurbished 56-seat McDonnell Douglas DC-9. Legend soon operated scheduled passenger service nonstop from Love Field to Los Angeles (
LAX), New York
LaGuardia Airport (LGA), Las Vegas (LAS), and Dulles (IAD). On 1 May 2000, American Airlines launched a direct challenge to Legend with its first flights from Love Field since 1974, starting service with
Fokker 100s specially refitted with 56 first-class seats and offering flights to
Chicago and
Los Angeles. On 29 June 2000, the
United States Supreme Court declined to review a federal appeals court decision allowing long-haul flights from Love, effectively ending the last attempt by Fort Worth, the D/FW Airport Board, and American Airlines to stop such flights. Board officials stated that they would not pursue further legal action. Despite the Shelby Amendment, Southwest did not add flights to the new states, citing a lack of demand.
Missouri added In 2005, Senator
Kit Bond of
Missouri attached an amendment to a transportation spending bill to exempt his state from the Wright restrictions. Soon after the bill's passage, Southwest began nonstop flights from Love Field to
St. Louis and
Kansas City on 13 December 2005. == Repeal efforts ==