Journal Pioneer

Demand collapse

American Airlines cutting internatio­nal flights by 75 per cent

- DAVID SHEPARDSON TRACY RUCINSKI

WASHINGTON/CHICAGO – American Airlines Inc said Saturday it plans to cut 75 per cent of its internatio­nal flights through May 6 and ground nearly all its widebody fleet, as airlines respond to the global collapse in travel demand due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The dramatic announceme­nt by the largest U.S. airline came hours after the White House said the United States would widen new travel restrictio­ns on Europeans to include travelLers in the United Kingdom and Ireland, starting tonight.

The Trump administra­tion has also signalled it wanted Congress to quickly back financial support for troubled U.S. airlines.

American’s sweeping cuts include suspending nearly all long-haul internatio­nal flights to Asia, Australia, Europe, New Zealand and South America.

It will still operate two flights a day to London and just three flights to Asia per week - to Tokyo. It will continue short-haul internatio­nal flying.

American confirmed it is parking nearly all widebody aircraft and anticipate­s its domestic capacity will be reduced by 20% in April and 30% in May versus the same period in 2019.

United Airlines Co said late Saturday it would begin cutting flights to the United Kingdom, Southwest Airlines moved toward flight cuts and Delta Airlines Inc plans to start cutting flights to the United Kingdom.

Southwest, one of the few U.S. airlines still flying a full schedule, said it was “seriously considerin­g” cutting flights.

While airlines scrambled to stem losses and protect jobs, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the government would “immediatel­y” start working with Congress to support the airline and cruise industries, both hard hit by the spiraling crisis.

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence said restrictio­ns on the UK and Ireland will begin Monday at midnight, barring most non-U.S. citizens from entering the United States who have been in those countries within the last 14 days.

They do not bar flights to and from the United States, and Americans and permanent residents can still travel.

United said it would suspend flights to London from Houston and Denver starting Monday. United said it expects to fly three daily flights to London and one daily flight to Dublin through the end of April.

United said it would give a credit for the value of the ticket for any customer whose internatio­nal travel is disrupted by more than six hours because of schedule changes resulting from government restrictio­ns. Customers who do not use the credit for 12 months will get a refund.

Washington first imposed restrictio­ns on China and then expanded them to continenta­l Europe, prompting U.S. airlines to cut numerous flights and scramble to shore up capital.

Among cost-cutting measures, U.S. airlines are offering employees voluntary unpaid leaves of absence to match staffing with flights.

The outbreak came as Delta and its pilots’ union were in contract negotiatio­ns, and the sides reached an agreement on coronaviru­s-related sick leave and managing overstaffi­ng for April with partially paid schedules.

United and Southwest could reach deals with their pilots soon, sources said.

 ?? JOSHUA ROBERTS /REUTERS ?? An American Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 flight from Los Angeles taxis after landing at Reagan National Airport shortly after an announceme­nt was made by the FAA that the planes were being grounded by the United States over safety issues in Washington, last year.
JOSHUA ROBERTS /REUTERS An American Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 flight from Los Angeles taxis after landing at Reagan National Airport shortly after an announceme­nt was made by the FAA that the planes were being grounded by the United States over safety issues in Washington, last year.

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