The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Aircraft companies to get $482M in pandemic aid

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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 the fund funds 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. Parker-Hannifin 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 offering incentives for employees to quit or retire early.

Critics labeled the airline aid a bailout that amounted to several hundred thousand dollars for each job that was spared — 75,000 jobs, by some estimates. Defenders such as American Airlines CEO Doug Parker say that without the government’s help,

airlines would have been forced to shut down when traffic fell to levels not seen since the 1950s.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion, part of the Transporta­tion Department, recently

awarded $100 million to aerospace companies including Boeing, General Electric’s aviation division and jet engine maker Pratt & Whitney to make planes less polluting and quieter.

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 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A U.S. Air Force KC-46A Pegasus jet takes off in view of a line of Boeing 777X jets parked nose to tail on an unused runway at Paine Field, near Boeing’s massive production facility in Everett, Wash. The Biden administra­tion wants to provide aid to aviation manufactur­ers to help save jobs at companies that are still struggling because of the pandemic.
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A U.S. Air Force KC-46A Pegasus jet takes off in view of a line of Boeing 777X jets parked nose to tail on an unused runway at Paine Field, near Boeing’s massive production facility in Everett, Wash. The Biden administra­tion wants to provide aid to aviation manufactur­ers to help save jobs at companies that are still struggling because of the pandemic.

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