National Post (National Edition)

U.S. airlines renew their job loss warnings

- JUSTIN BACHMAN AND MARY SCHLANGENS­TEIN

United Airlines Holdings Inc. notified 14,000 employees that their jobs will be at risk in April after the second round of federal payroll support expires, saying the coronaviru­s pandemic still weighs heavily on the travel outlook.

The new notices cover every work group except pilots, United said. Last month, U.S. airlines recalled furloughed workers after Congress renewed federal aid for the industry through March 31.

“Despite ongoing efforts to distribute vaccines, customer demand has not changed much since we recalled those employees,” United said in a message to employees Friday.

The warning underscore­s the uncertain outlook at airlines, which are still reeling from an unpreceden­ted decline in air travel because of the pandemic. American Airlines Group Inc. may have to issue a second round of furlough notices when federal aid expires, CEO Doug Parker told employees in a meeting to discuss the carrier’s fourth-quarter loss.

“Demand has not returned as quickly as we had hoped, so there’s a chance we’ll be in a position where we have more team members than we need to operate the summer schedule,” said Matt Miller, a spokesman for American.

The Fort Worth, Tex. based airline is talking with its unions about options, Parker told financial analysts Thursday. The company has already agreed to another round of voluntary leaves and early exits, Julie Hedrick, president of the Associatio­n of Profession­al Flight Attendants told members.

The union “is not interested in offering concession­s,” Hedrick said in an email to attendants.

The APFA and the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants-CWA sent a letter Friday to President Joe Biden and Congressio­nal leaders requesting US$15 billion for a third round of airline payroll support, with funding through Sept 30. “The alternativ­e is mass layoffs starting in April,” the unions said.

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