The Oklahoman

US will give aircraft firms $482M for pandemic relief

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The Biden administra­tion is making $482 million available to aviation industry manufactur­ers to help them avert job or pay cuts in the pandemic.

The taxpayer-funded relief will cover up to half of the payroll costs at 313 companies, according to the Transporta­tion Department, which said Thursday will help save up to 22,500 jobs.

Air travel plummeted due to the spread of COVID-19. The delta variant has led to elevated cancellati­ons and diminished travel in recent months. More than 100,000 aerospace jobs have been lost in an industry that had employed about 2.2 million people, according to the Transporta­tion Department.

The largest recipient of the fund announced Monday is Spirit Aerosystem­s, a Boeing supplier based in Kansas, which stands to get $75.5 million that the government says will help protect 3,214 jobs. ParkerHann­ifin Corp. of Ohio, which makes hydraulic systems for planes, will get $39.7 million. The avionics unit of Japan’s Panasonic, based in California, will get $25.8 million; and several U.S. subsidiari­es of France’s Safran S.A. will get a total of $24.8 million.

Money for the aerospace companies is coming from a $1.9 trillion package approved by Congress and signed by President Joe Biden in March.

The relief is similar to a much larger aid program for U.S. airlines, which have received $54 billion in the past year and a half. The airlines also agreed not to furlough any workers, but they eliminated tens of thousands of jobs anyway by offering incentives for employees to quit or retire early.

Critics labeled the airline aid a bailout that amounted to several hundred thousand dollars for each spared job – 75,000 jobs, by some estimates.

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