Los Angeles Times

American Airlines to cut 19,000 workers

The carrier says the reductions will come unless it gets more federal payroll aid after Oct. 1.

- Bloomberg

American Airlines Group Inc. says it will cut 19,000 workers once federal payroll aid expires Oct. 1, capping a 30% workforce reduction since the coronaviru­s outbreak began to ravage the demand for travel.

About 17,500 employees will be furloughed, meaning they are eligible to be called back when conditions improve, and 1,500 previously announced cuts to management staff will take effect, the airline said by email Tuesday. American is the first major carrier to disclose how much it will shrink operations as it adjusts to passenger numbers that are down 70% from last year.

American’s plan, bringing its total pandemic cuts to 40,000 positions, heralds thousands more job reductions at U.S. airlines after the expiration of protection­s linked to federal financial aid. Debate has stalled in Congress over a six-month extension of the government’s $25-billion payroll support program for passenger carriers, which would carry the same restrictio­ns on workforce cuts. A new round of assistance would avert involuntar­y job cuts, American said.

“We have come to you many times throughout the pandemic, often with sobering updates on a world none of us could have imagined,” Chief Executive Doug

Parker and President Robert Isom said in a letter to employees that was disclosed in a regulatory filing. “Today is the hardest message we have had to share.”

Shares of American Airlines fell 2.2% on Tuesday, the day after airline stocks rallied on upbeat expectatio­ns for coronaviru­s treatments and vaccines. American’s

shares have tumbled 54% this year, with only United Airlines Holdings Inc. declining more on a Standard & Poor’s index of major U.S. carriers.

Based on current demand, American plans to fly less than 50% of its normal schedule in the fourth quarter, with long-haul internatio­nal at only 25% of 2019 levels, Parker and Isom said.

“We don’t think we’re going to see recovery for a long time,” said Helane Becker, a Cowen & Co. analyst. “We think three to five years for domestic and five to seven for internatio­nal” to get back to last year’s levels. American’s job cuts are “not surprising, and you’re going to see more.”

The planned reductions will bring American’s total employment to fewer than 100,000, compared with about 140,000 in March. About 12,500 workers have left voluntaril­y, and 11,000 are slated to be on leave starting Oct. 1.

Flight attendants will be hit particular­ly hard, with voluntary departures, leaves and furloughs reducing their workforce by 57% from before the pandemic. The number of pilots will fall 23%.

“The one possibilit­y of avoiding these involuntar­y reductions on Oct. 1 is a clean extension” of federal support for payrolls, the airline said in the letter.

The Fort Worth company previously warned that as many as 25,000 workers could be laid off. United put its number at 36,000.

“If the airlines had not been working so hard on voluntary programs, the news would be far worse,” said Samuel Engel, head of the aviation group at consulting firm ICF.

Delta Air Lines Inc. said Monday that it would furlough 1,941 pilots but hasn’t outlined involuntar­y changes for other employee groups. Southwest Airlines Co. has said enough workers took early retirement and leave that it will have no furloughs this year.

More than 150,000 workers at the four largest U.S. carriers already have taken early departures or agreed to temporary leaves. Spirit Airlines Inc. and the Air Line Pilots Assn. reached an agreement to reduce aviators’ work hours, preventing 600 from being furloughed starting in October, the union said in a statement Tuesday.

 ?? Lynne Sladky Associated Press ?? “TODAY is the hardest message we have had to share,” CEO Doug Parker and President Robert Isom said in a note to employees disclosed in a regulatory filing.
Lynne Sladky Associated Press “TODAY is the hardest message we have had to share,” CEO Doug Parker and President Robert Isom said in a note to employees disclosed in a regulatory filing.

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