Toronto Star

CAE to lay off 350 workers

Job cuts come as part of company’s $100M restructur­ing plan,

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

MONTREAL— CAE Inc. plans to lay off 350 employees before November, part of a restructur­ing program slated to cost $100 million following a loss of more than that in its latest quarter as revenue fell by a third.

About 200 of the layoffs will be at the flight simulator maker’s headquarte­rs i n Montreal, with the other 150 occurring across its civil training network abroad, a spokespers­on confirmed.

Job cuts at the company, which has 10,000 employees on six continents including 4,700 in Canada, began in late July and will continue through late October.

“We saw the full brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic hit us during the first quarter with sharply lower demand and major disruption­s to our global operations,” CEO Marc Parent told investors Wednesday at the company’s annual shareholde­r meeting which was held virtually.

CAE shut down manufactur­ing at its main facility near Montreal’s Trudeau airport and more than half of its civil training network across the globe between April and June.

The company delivered only two simulators, while training facility use bottomed out at 20 per cent capacity before rising to about 40 per cent currently, driving down revenue in the civil aviation segment by nearly half in the first quarter of its fiscal year.

“That’s unheard of,” Parent said. “Everything is out of whack in this environmen­t.”

All of its training centres had reopened by July, but many remain at reduced capacity.

In its defence division, fallout from the pandemic caused delivery and order delays as travel restrictio­ns and snarled supply chains affected military customers, CAE said.

The company’s health-care unit found that academic institutio­ns and nursing schools, which comprise the bulk of the segment’s clients, came under lockdown protocols that hampered its ability to conclude contracts and deliver on existing orders.

In response, the company announced a $100-million restructur­ing program — asset relocation­s, real estate costs and employee terminatio­n benefits make up much of the price tag — that it hopes will yield $50 million in annual savings next year.

“The pace of recovery is unlikely to be linear or quick, and it will most certainly be dictated by the rate at which travel restrictio­ns and quarantine­s can safely be lifted and economic activity improves,” Parent said.

“We continue to view the current fiscal year as a tale of two halves, with the first half of the year marked by lower demand and disruption­s, and the second half to potentiall­y begin to inflect more positively.”

CAE reported a loss of $110.6 million in the quarter ended June 30, compared with a yearearlie­r profit of $61.5 million.

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