The Scotsman

Virgin Atlantic plans to cut almost 1,200 more jobs

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Virgin Atlantic plans to cut another 1,150 jobs and has completed its £ 1.2 billion rescue deal, the airline said.

The announceme­nt comes less than four months after the carrier axed 3,150 roles and ended its operations at Gatwick Airport due to the collapse in demand caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Chief executive Shai Weiss said: “After the sacrifices so many of our people have made, further reducing the number of people we employ is heart- breaking, but essential for survival. I truly hope that, as demand returns, we will see many members of our team returning to us.”

The latest job cuts are part of “further downsizing across the business”, Virgin Atlantic said in a statement.

The airline operator has started a 45- day consultati­on period with trade unions Unite and Balpa.

The airline’s £ 1.2bn bailout was completed following approval by courts in the UK and the US.

The deal involves only private funds, and includes a cash injection of £ 200 million from founder Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group.

A part of the package, creditors agreed to accept 20 per cent less than they are owed and for the carrier’s repay

ments to be reschedule­d. The airline warned last month it could run out of money by the end of September if the deal was rejected.

Mr Weiss said: “Together, we have achieved what many thought impossible and that is down to the efforts and sacrifices of so many across the company.

“The completion of the private- only, solvent recapitali­sation of Virgin Atlantic removes much of the uncertaint­y we faced and represents a major step forward in our fight for survival.

“We greatly appreciate the support of our shareholde­rs, creditors and new private investors and together, we will ensure that the airline continues to provide vital connectivi­ty and competitio­n.”

The airline called for the UK and US to introduce “robust passenger testing regimes” to enable travel restrictio­ns to be lifted. It is planning for a scenario in which transatlan­tic flying from the UK does not extend beyond existing skeleton operations until the beginning of next year.

This would mean capacity across its network in the final three months of the year would be around a quarter of what it was in 2019.

Balpa general secretary Brian Strutton said: “Hardly a day now goes by without more tough news from the aviation industry. This announceme­nt from Virgin is the latest.

“Our reps are meeting with Virgin next week and I am hopeful that we will find a way through to avoid any further pilot redundanci­es. Every single job lost to this crisis is a tragedy and we are doing everything we can to mitigate job losses across the board.

“Despite no help from government, their financing is now secure. I am confident that Virgin Atlantic will get through this coronaviru­s crisis and will emerge in a strong position.”

Unite assistant general secretary Diana Holland said: “This announceme­nt by Virgin Atlantic is another serious blow to the UK’S aviation industry and is a searing indictment of the cavalier way that the government has treated the aviation sector.”

 ??  ?? 0 Virgin Atlantic axed 3,150 jobs less than 4 months ago
0 Virgin Atlantic axed 3,150 jobs less than 4 months ago

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