Lodi News-Sentinel

Airline contractor­s received CARES Act funding, still cut jobs

- By Kelly Yamanouchi

The CARES Act funding approved by Congress for the aviation industry was meant to preserve jobs, but didn't prevent some layoffs and furloughs by airline contractor­s, an investigat­ion found.

While lawmakers consider another round of federal pandemic aid, they are asking the companies awarded money to stop cutting workers.

Atlanta-based DAL Global Services, which does contract work for Delta Air Lines and other carriers, is one of 15 companies that got federal stimulus funding but still furloughed or laid off workers, according to a U.S. House subcommitt­ee investigat­ion of the Payroll Support Program (PSP) for the aviation industry.

DAL Global Services qualified for $162.7 million in CARES Act funding to pay employees, according to the U.S. Treasury Department's website.

U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, the South Carolina Democrat who chairs the subcommitt­ee, wrote letters to that company and six other aviation contractor­s that received the most funding to ask them to halt further layoffs while using the federal stimulus money.

The move comes as airlines push for another round of federal stimulus funding. The subcommitt­ee is in favor of that funding, but called for an amendment to prohibit layoffs by aviation contractor­s until their funds are completely spent.

The House subcommitt­ee's staff report said the Treasury department "delayed execution of PSP agreements for months and permitted layoffs while the agreements were pending."

That "had the perverse effect of incentiviz­ing companies to lay off or furlough workers before executing the agreement," the report said. Airline caterer Gate Gourmet, which has operations at the Atlanta airport, laid off thousands of employees nationally before it executed its agreement in June and later recalled 900 workers, according to the report.

Aviation contractor­s have seen cutbacks in work from airlines since the pandemic began, prompting a sharp decline in air travel.

Delta Air Lines is looking to handle in-house work normally done by contractor­s, including wheelchair handling, aircraft servicing, cargo handling and plane fueling. That's because Atlanta-based Delta has a surplus of staff for its scaled-back operation amid the pandemic and is looking for ways to avoid layoffs of its own employees.

Among the layoffs reported to Georgia by airline contractor­s are 39 workers let go in March by DAL Global Services, and hundreds of employees cut in April and May by ABM Aviation and Delta Sky Club contractor SodexoMAGI­C. Separately, Hartsfield-Jackson concession­aire HMSHost disclosed 570 job cuts effective Oct. 16.

DAL Global Services is a former subsidiary of Delta Air Lines. It merged with Argenbrigh­t Holdings I LLC in 2018 and is being renamed Unifi.

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