Albany Times Union

Democratic airline aid proposal stalls in Congress

32,000 layoffs coming; Republican­s block relief bill in Congress

- By David Koenig

A proposal by House Democrats to give the airline industry $28.8 billion to avert thousands of furloughs failed to advance on Friday, marking a fresh setback for airlines struggling with a massive downturn in travel during the pandemic.

Rep. Peter Defazio, D - Ore., accused Republican­s of blocking him from bringing the measure to the House floor under special rules that require unanimous agreement of the lawmakers.

Earlier in the day, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi urged airlines to delay 32,000 furloughs that began this week while Congress considered

Defazio’s bill.

American Airlines and United Airlines held back, however, saying they would wait for Congress to approve the money before recalling furloughed workers.

Messages left with two spo

kespeople for the House Republican leadership were not immediatel­y returned.

The standoff appeared to end until next week any chance of more payroll aid for the carriers. The airlines and their unions are seeking more taxpayer money to prevent furloughs through next March.

Congress approved $25 billion in payroll aid six months ago in hopes that the travel industry might be stronger by fall. The money and an accompanyi­ng ban on layoffs expired Thursday.

There is widespread support in Congress for giving the airlines another $25 billion, but the plan bogged down as congressio­nal Democrats and the White House failed to agree on a larger pandemic-relief measure. Until Friday, lawmakers avoided trying to give money to just one industry while others are struggling hotels, restaurant­s and retail stores layoff workers.

Defazio, who chairs the House Transporta­tion Committee, introduced a stand-alone measure to give up to $25.5 billion to passenger airlines, $3 billion to their contractor­s and $300 million to cargo airlines.

The money would be earmarked for wages and benefits through next March. Airlines would keep current workforces intact without dipping into the billions they have raised from private lenders and up to $25 billion in low-interest government loans that Congress approved six months ago.

“We will either enact Chairman Defazio’s bipartisan standalone legislatio­n or achieve this as part of a comprehens­ive negotiated relief bill,” Pelosi said. While Congress works on this, “the airline industry must delay these devastatin­g job cuts,” she said.

The bill picked up a quick Republican endorsemen­t from Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, who is up for re-election in a state where American and Southwest

are based and employ thousands. Cornyn is one of 16 Senate Republican­s who earlier supported more money for airlines.

Airline stocks rose Friday after Pelosi’s announceme­nt. U.S. air travel has recovered partially since falling 96 percent in mid-april but it remains down 70 percent from a year ago. The industry is losing billions monthly. With no vaccine and the U.S. hit by more than 40,000 new confirmed cases of COVID -19 a day, holiday travel season looks grim.

“Airlines face an uncertain winter. An extension to the Payroll Support Program would protect jobs across our industry until next spring and ensure airlines are here to help support the economic recovery when we are through this,” said Emily Martin for Jetblue, which hasn’t announced any furloughs.

Airlines cut tens of thousands of jobs via buyouts. But American is furloughin­g 19,000, United is cutting 13,000, and Alaska furloughed about 500. Delta said voluntary departures prevented layoffs. But Delta pilots could be furloughed November if they don’t agree to concession­s.

 ?? Patrick T. Fallon / Bloomberg News Service ?? A worker scrubs an American Airlines counter at Oklahoma’s Tulsa Internatio­nal Airport. American and United will cut thousands of workers.
Patrick T. Fallon / Bloomberg News Service A worker scrubs an American Airlines counter at Oklahoma’s Tulsa Internatio­nal Airport. American and United will cut thousands of workers.

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