San Antonio Express-News

Bill to bring back 30,000 airlines workers

- By Kyle Arnold

Airlines will bring back more than 30,000 furloughed workers as part of the sweeping $900 billion economic stimulus bill that Congress leaders agreed to Sunday, including 17,500 workers at Fort Worth-based American Airlines.

After wrangling over a stimulus package for months that includes direct payments to Americans and increased relief for small businesses, the air travel industry was able to secure an additional $15 billion in aid to airlines that would bring back workers, guarantee pay and delay talk of payroll cutbacks until at least the end of March.

The bill is still waiting on a final vote and signature from President Donald Trump, but key lawmakers in both chambers of Congress endorsed the compromise.

American Airlines and Dallasbase­d Southwest Airlines are in line for billions of dollars in direct grants to help cover worker costs, similar to the program passed in March that not only prevented layoffs but also stopped companies from giving dividends, buying back shares and giving executive raises.

American Airlines will begin recalling furloughed employees as soon as lawmakers approve the deal, CEO Doug Parker said Monday.

The first paychecks are set to be issued as soon as Dec. 24 to workers who had been sent home,

Parker and American’s president, Robert Isom, said Monday in a memo to employees. Pay and benefits would be retroactiv­e to Dec. 1. The recalls will be ordered according to work groups, the company’s staffing needs and seniority, a spokesman for American said.

“We’ve fought shoulder to shoulder with our labor partners since the summer to get to this

point,” Parker and Isom wrote. They asked employees to contact congressio­nal representa­tives to ensure that the bill becomes law.

Airlines have been begging for an extension of the previous stimulus program since this summer, when it was clear that the COVID-19 pandemic was far worse than previously imagined and that the travel industry wouldn’t recover soon.

American furloughed 17,5000 workers Oct. 1 when that first round of money ran out and laid off an additional 1,500. Southwest has threatened to furlough more than 7,200 workers next fall after failing to come to an agreement on 10 percent wage cuts with workers.

United, Alaska and Spirit airlines have also furloughed workers who would likely be brought back in the coming weeks.

Despite efforts to cut flights, reduce costs and find new efficienci­es, airlines are facing multibilli­on-dollar losses for the third straight quarter. Data from the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion shows that passenger traffic is still down more than 60 percent despite the industry’s efforts to require face masks on flights and in airports.

Just over 1 million passengers passed through TSA checkpoint­s at U.S. airports Friday and Saturday, some of the busiest days since the beginning of the pandemic. But that compares with more than 2.5 million on comparable days a year ago.

Most of the big-spending business travelers have abandoned air travel during the pandemic. And even leisure passengers, who are more price-conscious, are fickle about flying with many of the country’s tourism hot spots closed. Many popular tourist spots, including Hawaii and New York, have tight restrictio­ns on out-of-state travelers that have essentiall­y killed the tourism industry in those regions.

This new round of stimulus doesn’t fix any of those problems caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has killed more than 300,000 people in the U.S. But it does buy airlines time while the country waits for a handful of COVID-19 vaccines to be widely distribute­d to the public, which likely won’t happen until the second half of 2021, according to government health officials.

 ?? Tribune News Service file photo ?? Over 1 million passengers went through security at U.S. airports Friday and Saturday, two of the busiest days since the pandemic began. But over 2.5 million did so on comparable days a year ago.
Tribune News Service file photo Over 1 million passengers went through security at U.S. airports Friday and Saturday, two of the busiest days since the pandemic began. But over 2.5 million did so on comparable days a year ago.

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