Hartford Courant

Pratt & Whitney to cut salaried workers

Jet engine maker cites commercial aviation’s woes amid COVID-19

- By Stephen Singer

Jet engine manufactur­er Pratt & Whitney, reeling from the downturn in commercial aviation caused by COVID-19, said Tuesday it’s laying off salaried workers.

The East Hartford subsidiary of Raytheon Technologi­es Corp. did not say how many workers or at which of its work sites in the U.S. and globally will be affected, but notificati­ons will be completed by Thursday. In Connecticu­t, Pratt & Whitney makes engines in East Hartford and Middletown.

Salaried workers could include administra­tive employees, engineers and others. Workers whoare members of the machinists union are not affected.

In a statement, Pratt & Whitney said it made the “extremely difficult but necessary decision to implement an involuntar­y separation program” for salaried workers. It cited reduced commercial business due to COVID-19.

“This has forced us to take further actions to align with current and future business demand in an evolving environmen­t,” the manufactur­er said.

Tens of thousands of airline jobs could disappear if Congress and President Donald Trump fail to reach agreement on a second round of economic stimulus for the industry. Since the pandemic hit, thousands of flight attendants, baggage handlers, gate agents and others have received some financial help from Washington as part of $25 billion in grants and loans to the nation’s airlines. Compa

nies agreed to not lay off employees through Sept. 30.

Raytheon Technologi­es Chief Executive Officer Greg Hayes said last month the commercial aviation and defense giant is cutting 15,000 jobs, or about 7.7% of its global workforce of nearly 200,000. The reductions are limited to Pratt & Whitney and Collins Aerospace, a manufactur­er of airline cockpit equipment, flight data components and other parts and materials.

Military sales remain robust due to increased Pentagon spending.

The April-to-June quarter was the worst three-month period for airlines, which faced an “unpreceden­ted loss of revenue,” the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n said in a recent report. Revenue was down about 80% compared with the same quarter in 2019 “with almost full grounding of the passenger fleet despite strong cargo revenues,” the organizati­on said.

As a result, airlines “turned their focus on cutting expenses during this period,” IATA said. But operating costs were reduced by 50% year-over-year due to costs such as labor and maintenanc­e costs, it said.

Raytheon Technologi­es has gradually ratcheted up cost-cutting as the coronaviru­s drags on, even spiking in recent months. In mid-April, less than two weeks after its launch as a result of the combinatio­n of United Technologi­es Corp. and Raytheon Co ., the conglomera­te announced pay cuts and furloughs.

Second-quarter sales at Pratt & Whitney fell 30%, to $3.6 billion, from the same period last year and posted a rare loss of $151 million.

However, Pratt & Whitney posted an 11% increase in military sales, specifical­ly engine production for the F -35 fighter jet manufactur­ed by Lockheed Martin Corp ., in the April-to-June quarter. It also reported a rise in parts sales and servicing on fighter jet platforms.

Raytheon Technologi­es has scheduled its third-quarter financial release for Oct. 27.

 ?? COURANTFIL­E PHOTO ?? Jet engine manufactur­er Pratt & Whitney, reeling from the recent economic downturn, said Tuesday it will lay off salaried workers.
COURANTFIL­E PHOTO Jet engine manufactur­er Pratt & Whitney, reeling from the recent economic downturn, said Tuesday it will lay off salaried workers.

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