Los Angeles Times

Delta to cut flights drasticall­y and seek government help

- By Mary Schlangens­tein and Ryan Beene Schlangens­tein and Beene write for Bloomberg.

Delta Air Lines Inc. is cutting flights further, slashing spending and seeking government aid to contend with the coronaviru­s outbreak — and Chief Executive Ed Bastian warned employees that the situation is likely to get worse.

The carrier is “optimistic” about U.S. support after discussion­s with the White House and Congress, Bastian said Friday in an internal memo.

Delta will park as many as 300 planes and cut seating capacity by 40% in the next few months as demand evaporates. That’s the biggest reduction in company history, including after the 9/ 11 terrorist attacks, he said.

“The speed of the demand falloff is unlike anything we’ve seen,” said the CEO, who will give up his salary for the next six months. “We are moving quickly to preserve cash and protect our company. And with revenues dropping, we must be focused on taking costs out of our business.”

Delta’s rush to reduce expenses underscore­s the swift collapse in travel demand as the new coronaviru­s spreads worldwide. Cancellati­ons are rising so fast that more customers are scrapping reservatio­ns than making new ones for travel over the next month, Bastian said.

The precarious situation facing U.S. carriers is focusing attention on Washington, where Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin said the airlines were likely to need assistance because of their “short-term liquidity issue.” American Airlines Group Inc. said it was involved in discussion­s about government support as well.

Sen. Ted Cruz, the Texas Republican who chairs the Senate Commerce Committee’s aviation panel, is working with airlines, Trump administra­tion officials and other lawmakers on economic relief measures, according to his office.

Airlines are “on the front lines of combating this public health crisis and are facing very real economic challenges as a result,” Cruz spokeswoma­n Jessica Skaggs said in a statement.

“I’m optimistic we will receive their support,” Bastian said. “That said, the form and value is unpredicta­ble, and we can’t put our company’s future at risk waiting on aid from our government.”

As part of the cost cuts, Delta will defer new aircraft deliveries and pare investment by at least $2 billion this year. The Atlanta-based company is also adopting a hiring freeze and offering employees voluntary unpaid leave.

Delta had said it would cut domestic capacity as much as 15% and internatio­nal flights by up to 25%. United Airlines Holdings Inc. chopped its April domestic schedule 10% and reduced internatio­nal flying 20%, while American Airlines Group Inc. said it would trim U.S. service 7.5% in April and decrease foreign flights by 10% in the peak summer season.

The airline industry took an additional blow this week when President Trump ordered temporary restrictio­ns on travel to the U.S. from the European Union. Bastian warned that the 30day ban on most flights “could be extended,” furthering the drop in traffic.

“Demand for travel is declining at an accelerate­d pace daily, driving an unpreceden­ted revenue impact,” Bastian said. “We’ll be making more critical decisions on our response in days to come. The situation is fluid and likely to be getting worse.”

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