San Antonio Express-News

Quitting on minds of many workers

- By Alexandra Olson

NEW YORK — The pandemic has put millions of Americans out of work. But many of those still working are fearful, distressed and stretched thin.

A quarter of U.S. workers say they even have considered quitting their jobs as worries related to the pandemic weigh on them, according to a poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research in collaborat­ion with the software company SAP. A fifth say they have taken leave.

About seven workers in 10 cited juggling their jobs and other responsibi­lities as a source of stress. Fears of contractin­g the virus also was a top concern for those working outside the home.

The good news is that employers are responding.

The poll finds 57 percent of workers saying their employers are doing “about the right amount” in responding to the pandemic; 24 percent say they are “going above and beyond.”

Just 18 percent say their employers are “falling short.”

the low point of the pandemic for the airline industry. Only 87,534 people went through checkpoint­s on April 14.

Still, the million passengers only represent about 40 percent of the number of travelers on the comparable day a year ago, when 2.6 million people started journeys at U.S. airports.

The milestone comes after months of efforts by airlines, airports and other groups to convince passengers that airplanes are safe to travel on, even if COVID-19 infection and death rates in many parts of the country begin to climb once again.

“TSA has been diligent in our efforts to ensure checkpoint­s are clean, safe and healthy for frontline workers and airline passengers, implementi­ng new protocols and deploying state-of-the-art technologi­es that improve security and reduce physical contact,” a statement from TSA Administra­tor David Pekoske said.

The agency has been implementi­ng plastic barriers and touch-free ID scanning technologi­es at security checkpoint­s, the release noted.

Several of the busiest days since mid-March have occurred in the past two weeks and passenger loads gradually have been increasing, but that provides scant relief for an industry still reeling from the pandemic.

If Sunday’s level were maintained for an entire year, it would roughly roll the industry back to levels last seen 36 years ago, according to the trade group for large carriers, Airlines for America.

TSA daily traffic numbers, which the agency began reporting near the beginning of the pandemic, show airline traffic tends to spike sharply on Thursdays, Friday and Sundays.

That’s because travel now is dominated by leisure travelers. Business travel is recovering much more slowly than leisure, and airline executives think it could be five to six years before business travel is back to prepandemi­c levels.

That’s a trend airline leaders have noted, since the work-from

home trend of the pandemic has led to more people leaving on Thursdays and working remotely from a new destinatio­n for a day before a leisure trip.

“A big part of it is acknowledg­ing that the customer is changing, and historical­ly, the network airline business was really leveraged around a small percentage of customers who flew disproport­ionately for business,” American Airlines chief revenue officer Vasu Raja said in an investor call last month.

Internatio­nal traffic also has evaporated, even though countries are starting to open slowly with required testing before travel.

Lately, airport traffic has been dropping in the middle of the week, particular­ly Monday through Wednesday. On those days, passenger traffic is hovering around 30 percent of prepandem

ic levels.

Airplanes also were about 59 percent full last week, according to trade group Airlines for America. That compares to about 85 percent in 2019 and far below break-even levels for airlines.

Several of the busiest days since mid-March have occurred in the past two weeks and passenger loads have been gradually increasing, but that provides scant relief for an industry still reeling from the pandemic.

The steep drop in flyers has prompted billions of dollars of losses and tens of thousands of job cuts or voluntary furloughs as impacts reverberat­e across the aviation industry.

A federal aid package that had covered the costs of airline payrolls and forbid job cuts expired Oct. 1, and attempts to extend it have faltered in partisan gridlock.

Airlines received $50 billion in cash and loans from Congress in March on the condition they held off on layoffs at least through October. Airlines now are warning of mass layoffs while lobbying Congress and the White House for another $25 billion to pay workers for the next six months.

The point at which Congress can deliver broader coronaviru­s relief before the November election is slipping away. The gap between what’s being sought by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her Senate Republican rivals and President Donald Trump seems increasing­ly insurmount­able.

Southwest Airlines, which never has laid off employees in its roughly 50-year history, warned this month that it will cut pay for nonunion workers in January and that union workers also must accept less pay or face furloughs next

year.

And while passenger numbers are increasing, no one knows if that trend will continue. Infections are spiking in the Midwest and stubbornly holding in place or edging higher in other parts of the country as colder weather settles in.

United and Delta Air Lines Inc. said last week that they expect a long, slow recovery until there’s a vaccine.

Rising daily passenger totals come as the United States’ coronaviru­s single-day case totals hit the highest point since late July, the Washington Post reported. The surge also comes a little over a month before Thanksgivi­ng, a holiday that typically brings the busiest travel day of the year.

 ?? Paul Chinn / San Francisco Chronicle ?? Several of the busiest days since mid-March have occurred in the past two weeks, but that provides scant relief for an industry still reeling from the pandemic. And while passenger numbers are increasing, no one knows if that trend will continue.
Paul Chinn / San Francisco Chronicle Several of the busiest days since mid-March have occurred in the past two weeks, but that provides scant relief for an industry still reeling from the pandemic. And while passenger numbers are increasing, no one knows if that trend will continue.

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