Albany Times Union

Airlines beginning furloughs

Empty jets, airports, impasse on stimulus lead to massive layoffs

- By Niraj Chokshi

When Congress gave passenger airlines a $50 billion bailout in March, industry executives hoped the aid would tide them over until the fall, when more people might be traveling and a vaccine might be closer at hand. Several months later, that hopeful future remains extremely murky.

With no recovery in sight and negotiatio­ns over another stimulus package at an impasse, United Airlines and American Airlines on Thursday began furloughin­g more than 32,000 workers. The companies said they would reverse the cuts if Congress and the Trump administra­tion reached an agreement to extend more aid to the industry, but there has been little or no progress in those talks.

“I am extremely sorry we have reached this outcome,” Doug Parker, American’s chief executive, told employees in a letter late Wednesday. “It is not what you all deserve.”

Airlines were prohibited by the March stimulus law from undertakin­g major cuts to where they fly and who they employ until Oct. 1. For months, unions have lobbied lawmakers for more money to postpone the day of reckoning, arguing that airlines are crucial to the economy, and help support other major employers like airports, hotels, car rental agencies and restaurant­s.

The campaign worked, but only to an extent. A bipartisan majority of lawmakers in the House of Representa­tives, at least 16 Republican senators and President Donald Trump said they would be willing to offer another lifeline to the industry. But the effort stalled as Congress and the administra­tion remained deadlocked on a broader aid package.

The Trump administra­tion has for weeks been exploring ways to help the industry unilateral­ly, through executive actions or by repurposin­g unused money from the previous relief legislatio­n. But officials have concluded that those options were not feasible. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has indicated that Congress would need to authorize the Treasury to redirect leftover funds.

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