The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta says 500 employees tested positive for COVID-19

Vast majority have recovered, CEO says, but 10 died due to virus.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

Delta Air Lines says 500 of the company’s 90,000 employees have tested positive for COVID-19.

CEO Ed Bastian said the vast majority have recovered. Ten died due to the virus. He said during a shareholde­rs meeting webcast Thursday that the rate of infection among employees is lower than “any national average we’ve seen” for overall infectious spread.

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion has about 50,000 security officers and has had about 689 employees test positive, including six who died as a result of the virus. Of the total, 21 TSA employees at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport tested positive, including one who died.

Infection rates have been particular­ly high at some workplaces such as meat and poultry processing plants. Media reports in May said a Tyson Foods pork processing plant in Iowa had 555 of the facility’s 2,517 workers test positive for COVID-19.

Delta plans to test all its employees for the virus through a partnershi­p with the Mayo Clinic and Quest Diagnostic­s starting in Minneapoli­s this week, then will expand testing to other hub cities in Atlanta, Detroit and New York.

Though most of Atlanta-based Delta’s nearly 10,000 administra­tive staff are working from home, Bastian said the majority of employees who are working need to be on site for work such as handling airport customers or working on planes.

Delta is allowing some social distancing in planes by blocking middle seats and capping seating capacity at 60% through Sept. 30.

“As demand starts to grow and as people have more confidence in the travel experience, we will decide later this year when we start to ease up on that cap restrictio­n,” Bastian said.

The company parked more than 700 planes, or more than half of its fleet, early in the pandemic. As the company rapidly scaled down operations and worked to raise cash to cover expenses, the board of directors was meeting virtually as often as three times a week.

Delta retired all MD-88 and MD-90s from its fleet, will retire all of its Boeing 777s and continues to look at retiring other types. More retirement decisions are likely by the end of the year, according to Bastian.

“We are realistic that the timing and shape of revenue recovery are uncertain,” Bastian said. “It could take up to two to three years to return to a new level of normal, which could still be lower than 2019.”

The continuing flight cancellati­ons and the impact of the virus on travel continue to cause frustratio­ns for some customers trying to get refunds or change flights.

In response to a question about long wait times for customer service, Bastian said about 2,000 reservatio­ns agents took leaves of absence as the company redesigned reservatio­ns centers to allow social distancing, and those employees will be returning to work over the next two weeks. He also said the company is expanding its use of at-home reservatio­ns agents.

“We are experienci­ng, as all airlines are, an unpreceden­ted surge in calls as people are canceling flights, changing plans, looking to see the status of their refunds and understand­ing what the new standards of cleanlines­s and care that we’re taking on board the planes,” Bastian said.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? A Delta Air Lines employee works behind plexiglass screens as she checks in passengers in the Domestic Terminal at Hartsfield Jackson Internatio­nal Airport in Atlanta last month.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM A Delta Air Lines employee works behind plexiglass screens as she checks in passengers in the Domestic Terminal at Hartsfield Jackson Internatio­nal Airport in Atlanta last month.
 ?? LUIS SINCO / LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Delta has overhauled how it cleans airplanes to attract people back to flying. But continuing flight cancellati­ons still frustrate some customers trying to get refunds or change flights
LUIS SINCO / LOS ANGELES TIMES Delta has overhauled how it cleans airplanes to attract people back to flying. But continuing flight cancellati­ons still frustrate some customers trying to get refunds or change flights

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