Houston Chronicle

Airlines, unions press for more aid as massive Oct. 1 layoffs loom

- By Alan Levin, Billy House and Keith Laing

Air carriers and their unions Tuesday ratcheted up pleas for an extended COVID-19 aid package to forestall layoffs, but a sudden Supreme Court vacancy and partisan rancor are dimming the prospects.

“At this point, it looks like everything is pretty much frozen,” said former Sen. Byron Dorgan of North Dakota, who served on the committee overseeing transporta­tion policy. “It doesn’t look like anything is going to happen.”

Weeks of lobbying, trips to the White House by airline executives and the prospects of massive job losses in states where incumbent Republican senators face tough re-election challenges — such as at airline hubs in Georgia, Arizona and Colorado — haven’t resulted in movement.

The frustratio­n was evident at a news conference outside the Capitol on Tuesday by a group of airline executives, union leaders and lawmakers from both parties.

“I just can’t believe that we may not be able to do the right thing simply because our elected officials can’t come to any sort of compromise agreement,” said Doug Parker, chairman and CEO of American Airlines Group Inc. “We’re better than that.”

Without congressio­nal action, tens of thousands of U.S. airline workers will lose their jobs Oct. 1, just weeks before elections.

Lack of action

An aid package passed in March provided $25 billion for the hard-hit airline industry to prop up payrolls. In return, carriers were required not to cut jobs and to maintain minimum levels of service.

But all that protection comes crashing down in just over a week.

A broad coalition that includes Republican­s and Democrats and President Donald Trump have been calling for extending the airline aid, yet it hasn’t gotten a green light from critical players, most notably Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has said she only would consider the aid as part of larger stimulus package — talks for which are at a standstill.

Pelosi and Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., chairman of the House Transporta­tion Committee, spoke to airline executives and labor leaders in separate phone calls last Friday.

Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, chairman of the the House Democratic Caucus, said Tuesday that he does not expect the matter to be addressed in a bill separate from a broader stimulus relief measure.

“I know there are discussion­s taking place at a high level,” Jeffries said. “The Republican­s are paying lip service to the notion that we should step in to the situation, but we really haven’t seen any movement in that regard.”

The lack of action despite bipartisan letters of support and bill introducti­ons is prompting unusually blunt language from participan­ts seeking help.

“Without a hard and public commitment from Leader McConnell to schedule a vote before Oct. 1, this is nothing more than election-year political grandstand­ing,” Julie Hedrick, president of the Associatio­n of

Profession­al Flight Attendants at American, said in a statement. “If we are going to save the airline industry, we have to do it now.”

Sara Nelson, president of the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants­CWA union, said, “We need leadership here to just simply do what every member across every party and the White House agrees needs to be done.”

Four people familiar with negotiatio­ns, including a Capitol Hill staffer and industry lobbyists, said they’re not optimistic there’s enough time or political will to pass an airline aid package before Oct. 1. They asked not to be identified while discussing the sensitive talks.

There also has been some grumbling that airlines shouldn’t be singled out for relief while restaurant­s and other travel businesses suffer equally or worse, several said.

Still, they said it’s impossible to rule out some kind of swift action that could result in new airline aid.

‘All of a sudden’

“The way things work in Congress, it looks like nothing is happening, and then all of a sudden it’s done,” said Dorgan, who is now a senior fellow at the Bipartisan Policy Center and an adviser at the Arent Fox LLP law firm.

Republican Sens. Roger Wicker of Mississipp­i and Susan Collins of Maine introduced legislatio­n Monday that would provide $28 billion in aid for passenger and cargo airlines as well as their contractor­s. No vote is scheduled on the bill, and a spokeswoma­n for the Commerce Committee, which Wicker chairs, declined to comment on its prospects.

American has said it will furlough 19,000 workers Oct. 1. United Airlines Holdings Inc. will lay off as many as 16,000. Delta Air Lines Inc. and Southwest Airlines Co. have said they will avoid most forced cuts for now after tens of thousands of workers retired early or took leaves of varying length.

Joe DePete, president of the Air Line Pilots Associatio­n, which represents more than 60,000 flight crew members, said at the news conference that carriers can’t just “flip a switch” and rehire workers who have lost their jobs. Pilots, flight attendants and mechanics all must be certified by the government and receive training that makes hiring cumbersome, DePete said.

“October is too late,” he said. “November is way too late. Airline relief doesn’t work retroactiv­ely.”

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a / Getty Images ?? Eric Ferguson, president of the Allied Pilots Associatio­n, joins airline executives, fellow union heads and political leaders in calling on Congress to approve extended COVID-19 aid to prevent layoffs.
Chip Somodevill­a / Getty Images Eric Ferguson, president of the Allied Pilots Associatio­n, joins airline executives, fellow union heads and political leaders in calling on Congress to approve extended COVID-19 aid to prevent layoffs.

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