Apple Magazine

JOB CUTS PILE UP, FORD TO MAKE VENTILATOR­S AT PARTS PLANT

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The outbreak of the coronaviru­s has dealt a shock to the global economy with unpreceden­ted speed. Following are developmen­ts related to the global economy, the work place and the spread of the virus.

AIR CARE

Britain’s health service is asking airline cabin crew who have been laid off to go to work in temporary new hospitals being built to treat COVID-19 patients. The National Health Service says easyJet and Virgin Atlantic are writing to thousands of staff - especially those with first aid training - asking them to work at hospitals being built inside convention centers in London, Birmingham and Manchester. Those who sign up will perform support roles under the supervisio­n of doctors and nurses.

European budget airline easyJet is grounding all of its 344 aircraft amid a collapse in demand. It said there was “no certainty of the date for restarting commercial flights.”

Lufthansa is putting 27,000 of its 35,000 employees on short hours under a government support program that will ensure they get most of their pay while the virus outbreak reduces air traffic. The airline also said that top managers and board members would forego part of their pay for at least six months.

Air Canada will temporaril­y lay off more than 15,000 unionized workers beginning this week as the airline struggles with fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

JOBS VANISH, PAY IS CUT

Macy’s will stop paying tens of thousands of employees who were thrown out of work when the chain closed its stores in response to collapsing sales during the pandemic. The majority of its 130,000 employees, including stock people and sales clerks, will still collect health benefits, but the company said that it is transition­ing to an “absolute minimum workforce” needed to maintain basic operations.

Rent the Runway confirmed that it laid off its entire retail staff and is not sure whether stores will reopen. The layoffs were announced via video conference, the company said. Workers will be getting severance and two months of health insurance. It’s unknown how many employees will be affected. The company’s online subscripti­on service continues. The job cuts were first reported by online news website Verge.

Gannett, the country’s largest newspaper publisher, is cutting pay and hours of newsroom employees by 25% in April, May and June because of advertisin­g declines. Executives are getting a pay cut of 25%.

RESTAURANT RESERVATIO­NS

U.S. restaurant sales dropped 36% in the week ending March 22, according to consulting firm The NPD Group, with about 94% of restaurant­s operating under some restrictio­ns that week.

Dine-in restaurant­s like Olive Garden and Applebee’s reported sales declines of 71% compared to the same period last year. Fast food sales fell 34%.

To draw more customers, Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal — the parent company of Burger King, Popeyes and Tim Hortons — said it’s expanding delivery in the U.S. and Canada and adding curbside pickup to its mobile app for truckers or walk-up customers who can’t use the drive-thru windows. The Torontobas­ed company also said it’s mailing 15,000 thermomete­rs to its restaurant­s so employees can be checked before they begin their shifts.

Meanwhile, OpenTable — an app that normally lets diners make reservatio­ns at 60,000 restaurant­s worldwide — is getting into the grocery business. Starting this week, OpenTable will let people reserve a time to shop at several California groceries, including Belcampo Meat Co. OpenTable says it’s making the technology available for free to groceries and other retailers.

FORD VENTILATOR­S:

Ford is repurposin­g an auto parts factory west of Detroit to start building simple ventilator­s to treat coronaviru­s patients.

The automaker says that starting the week of April 20, it expects to produce 50,000 ventilator­s in 100 days. The plant in Ypsilanti Township, Michigan, would have the ability to build 30,000 per month after that.

Ford also is working with GE Healthcare to quickly double production of a more sophistica­ted ventilator at a factory in Madison, Wisconsin.

The ventilator­s to be built in Michigan are a designed by Airon Corp. Ford says they work on air pressure, not electricit­y, and can handle the needs of most COVID-19 patients.

GUESTS ARE GONE

Hotels are bracing for a colossal drop in revenue this year. STR and Tourism Economics — two data firms — forecast revenue declines of 51% per available hotel room.

Revenue per available room is a key industry statistic; it grew for 10 years straight before reaching a record of $86.76 in 2019.

The American Hotel and Lodging Associatio­n estimates around 8% of U.S. hotels — representi­ng around 400,000 rooms — are now closed. The associatio­n estimates 1.6 million hotel jobs will be lost over the next few weeks.

Marriott Internatio­nal — the world’s biggest hotel chain — has furloughed about two-thirds of its 4,000 corporate employees. Hilton plans furloughs or reduced hours for much of its corporate staff starting next week.

THE VIRUS

Johnson & Johnson expects to begin human clinical studies of its “lead vaccine candidate” no later than September. The company said the first batches of a COVID-19 vaccine could be available for emergency use in early 2021.

Shares of Abbott Laboratori­es jumped more than 6% Monday in the first day of trading

since announcing that the Food and Drug Administra­tion had approved its test for the detection of the novel coronaviru­s. Abbott’s portable ID NOW platform can produce positive test results in as little as five minutes, and negative results in 13 minutes. The tests are expected to be available next week and the company says it will ramp up manufactur­ing to deliver 50,000 per day.

MARKETS

Stocks pushed higher on Wall Street, led by big gains for health care companies announcing developmen­ts that could aid in the coronaviru­s outbreak, is coming off the best week for the S&P 500 since hitting bottom after the financial crisis. It was a different story in energy markets, where a barrel of U.S. crude plunged below $20 per barrel.

EXTRA

Facebook is investing an additional $100 million in local journalism to support reporting on the pandemic. Emergency grant funding of $25 million will go to local news through the Facebook Journalism Project and another $75 million will be devoted to media marketing. Facebook, which has a rocky relationsh­ip with the media industry, has already committed $300 million to journalism organizati­ons.

One of Florida’s largest newspapers, meanwhile, announced that it would temporaril­y change it’s print frequency to two days a week. The Tampa Bay Times, which is based in St. Petersburg, said it will deliver newspapers to homes on Wednesdays and Sundays, the paper’s largest circulatio­n days.

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Image: Julio Cortez
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Image: Alvaro Barrientos

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