The Malta Business Weekly

EasyJet plans to close bases and cut staff

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EasyJet says it has begun consultati­ons on plans to close bases at Stansted, Southend and Newcastle.

It follows an announceme­nt by the airline that it may need to reduce staff numbers by up to a third because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Unite union said nearly 1,300 UK crew members faced losing their jobs.

Pilots' union Balpa said it had been told by EasyJet that 727 of its UK-based pilots were also at risk of redundancy.

That is equivalent to one in three of its pilots, Balpa said.

EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren said: "The lower demand environmen­t means we need fewer aircraft and have less opportunit­y for work for our people.

"We are committed to working constructi­vely with our employee representa­tives across the network with the aim of minimising job losses as far as possible."

However, Balpa general secretary

Brian Stratton said the job cuts were "an excessive over-reaction".

"EasyJet won't find a supply of pilots waiting to come back when the recovery takes place over the next two years."

And Unite said the plan to make 1,290 cabin crew redundant was a "massive blow" for a "battered industry".

"There is no need for this announceme­nt at this time, especially since Easyjet has taken a multi-million pound government loan which it ought to be putting to use defending UK jobs," said national officer for civil aviation Oliver Richardson.

Easyjet currently has 11 bases in the UK, with 163 aircraft, serving 546 routes.

Even though it is looking at closing the Stansted, Southend and Newcastle bases, it said the airports would remain part of its route network.

That means it will continue to fly in and out but will not have aircraft and crew based permanentl­y at the airports.

Easyjet has seven aircraft based at Stansted, with 335 crew. At Southend, there are 183 crew and four aircraft. And there are three aircraft based in Newcastle, with 157 crew.

The job cut proposals are not limited to the bases that may close, a Unite spokesman said.

Newcastle Airport said it was "saddened to hear of possible job losses and the significan­t impact this would cause."

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