In This Article:
More than 35,000 airline industry employees will be laid off from their jobs next week unless Congress is able to pass an extension of the Payroll Support Program (PSP) in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.
“I want people to know about the amount of human suffering and economic pain that is going to be inflicted if a deal isn’t cut by October 1,” Airlines For America (A4A) President and CEO Nick Calio told Yahoo Finance. “It’s very real and it can be stopped. It can be prevented.”
The original CARES Act Payroll Support Program (PSP) provided $25 billion in grants to U.S. airlines in exchange for guarantees they would not lay off employees. Those deals expire September 30.
American Airlines (AAL) plans to lay off roughly 20,000 employees while United Airlines (UAL) is furloughing about 16,000. Southwest (LUV) and Delta (DAL) have stated they will be able to avoid layoffs through the end of the year but may have to furlough employees in 2021. CEOs from all four of the carriers have called on Congress for additional aid.
President Trump supports an additional $25 billion for the airlines, and there is bipartisan support in Congress to include that airline aid, “PSP 2,” in a new CARES Act to stimulate the entire U.S. economy. Republicans have proposed a $500 billion package while Democrats originally pushed for a $3 trillion deal.
Raymond James analysts in their most recent note dated September 20th told clients, “If a bill is passed that is closer to $2T, there is a high likelihood of ‘PSP 2’ being included while if it is closer to $1.5T, support for the airline industry is more likely to get squeezed out.”
Calio is hopeful Republicans and Democrats will find a compromise that includes the airlines “We as an industry face a cliff that other industries don”t,” he said.
‘The clock is ticking’
An American Airlines flight attendant who will be furloughed October 1, and requested anonymity, said, “I feel for the company, they've got it worse than we do.”
Like all the airlines, American has borrowed billions of dollars, grounded hundreds of planes and reduced capacity, planning to fly at roughly 25% of its 2019 volume as it heads toward the end of the year.
American’s 8K filed last month said with layoffs, retirements and voluntary leaves of absence, “American’s team will have at least 40,000 fewer people working October 1 than we had when we entered this pandemic.”
The American flight attendant said, “I think that the reason Congress isn't doing anything, it's purely a political one, not an economic one,” and called congressional inaction a “political mess.”