Toronto Star

Thousands of WestJet employees to depart

Airline has cancelled all internatio­nal flights

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS THE CANADIAN PRESS

WestJet Airlines Ltd. says roughly half of its 14,000 employees will leave the company — some temporaril­y — due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 6,900 departures comprise early retirement­s, resignatio­ns and both voluntary and involuntar­y leaves after WestJet asked staff to choose one of those options or reduce their hours or pay, said CEO Ed Sims.

“This is devastatin­g news for all WestJetter­s,” Sims said in a statement Tuesday afternoon. “The fact that we avoided a potentiall­y worse outcome is testament to the spirit and selfless attitude demonstrat­ed by our people, who have enabled WestJet to continue operating with a collective remaining workforce of 7,100.”

The first wave of departures is set for Wednesday and the second for April 1.

The Calgary-based company has cancelled all internatio­nal flights for 30 days and, like Air Canada, severely scaled back domestic capacity.

Up to 600 Air Canada pilots will also go on unpaid leave in the coming months due to the fallout from the virus, their union said Tuesday.

On Thursday, the union representi­ng Air Canada’s flight attendants said the company will temporaril­y lay off more than 5,100 members.

The travel industry continues to reel as borders stay closed and planes parked across the globe.

Air Canada announced last week it is suspending most of its U.S. and overseas flights in response to border shutdowns. Porter Airlines and Transat AT Inc. are suspending all of their flights.

Global passenger revenues could plummet by $252 billion this year, a 44 per cent drop from 2019, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n said Tuesday.

“Airlines are fighting for survival in every corner of the world,” IATA director general Alexandre de Juniac said. “Travel restrictio­ns and evaporatin­g demand mean that, aside from cargo, there is almost no passenger business. For airlines, it’s apocalypse now.”

In a matter of weeks the trade group’s previous worst-case scenario — $113 billion forecasted on March 5 — has become much sunnier than its current projection.

“Without immediate government relief measures, there will not be an industry left standing,” de Juniac said.

He cited nine states including Australia, China and Sweden that have pledged aid packages in the form of loans, delayed fee payments and other measures.

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