The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

THE LATEST DEVELOPMEN­TS SLOW RECOVERY

Most recent numbers show passenger traffic starting to improve.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport is seeing an uptick in passengers, but a full recovery could be years away.

Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport is starting to see a slight uptick in passengers amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, but a full recovery could still be years away.

Airport General Manager John Selden told an Atlanta City Council committee Wednesday that gross revenue from concession­s and rental cars at the airport declined by nearly $42 million in the January-to-March quarter compared with a year earlier. The decline reflected just the first weeks of the pandemic.

Since then, more concession­s have suspended operations. About 310 of the airport’s 347 concession­s are now closed, after the airport shuttered Concourses B and E and parts of Concourses C and T in response to airlines cutting as much as 85% of their flights.

Passenger counts declined as much as 97% at the lowest point in April, but have recovered slightly to about an 88% decline year over year.

“We expect this to continue as people feel more and more comfortabl­e traveling,” Selden said.

He hopes to see passenger counts recover next year to closer to half the level seen before the pandemic. But he cautioned that a full recovery to pre-COVID-19 levels could take two to five years.

Hartsfield-Jackson handled 110.5 million passengers last year as the world’s busiest airport.

Selden said the airport cut rates in half for its parking decks and lots. It now costs $9 and $7 a day at decks and economy parking, respective­ly. The airport-run parkride lots are closed due to lack of demand.

The airport has about 250 hand sanitizer machines. The Atlanta Airlines Terminal Co., the airline cooperativ­e that operates and maintains the terminal and concourses, is adding 150 more Georgia-Pacific hand sanitizer machines with sensors that indicate when they need to be refilled.

Airport customer service representa­tives are handing out face coverings at security checkpoint­s to travelers who need them.

While it’s yet to be seen when travel will recover to necessitat­e more parking spaces, the airport earlier this year completed a new park-ride lot off Sullivan Road and is constructi­ng a new $224 million ATL West parking deck connected to the airport via the existing Sky Train.

Hartsfield-Jackson has also cut expenses by scaling back on contractor­s and delaying the opening of its new parking lot, among other measures.

The airport is eligible for $338.5 million in federal coronaviru­s relief funding, which Selden said will be used to make up for lost revenue. He said the airport will use the funds to pay its bills and employees, and will submit invoices to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion for reimbursem­ent from grant funds.

He added that Delta Air Lines, which has its largest hub at Hartsfield-Jackson, is adding flights back at its hubs.

”Atlanta is going to be one of the major places of recovery for Delta,” Selden said. If the Atlanta airport can get back to just 50 million passengers annually next year, “we think we’ll be in a very good position to have most of the airport open.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Passenger counts have declined by up to 97% at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport since the coronaviru­s pandemic began, while several concourses have been shut down as airlines cut flights by as much as 85%.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Passenger counts have declined by up to 97% at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport since the coronaviru­s pandemic began, while several concourses have been shut down as airlines cut flights by as much as 85%.

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