Airlines on track to get $15 billion in federal aid, must call back more than 30,000 furloughed workers

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Airlines could get $15 billion in additional payroll support under the bipartisan $900 billion coronavirus aid package.
U.S. passenger carriers continue to struggle under coronavirus with travel demand at about a third of last year’s levels.
Airlines received $25 billion in payroll support under the $2.2 trillion CARES Act in March.

A person walks at Reagan National Airport ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday in Arlington, November 25, 2020.
Hannah McKay | Reuters
U.S. airlines could receive $15 billion in additional federal aid to pay their workers under the latest bipartisan coronavirus relief package, which could be finalized as early as Sunday, according to people familiar with the matter.

Under the new round of aid, carriers would have to call back more than 32,000 workers who were furloughed this fall.

The CARES Act in March had allotted $25 billion for airlines on the condition that they maintained minimum service levels and kept workers on payroll through Sept. 30. Labor unions and airlines urged lawmakers to approve additional aid as furloughs loomed but Congress and the White House remained at odds over an deal for a national coronavirus aid package.

After the conditions of the original aid expired, United Airlines and American Airlines in October started furloughing about 32,000 employees, while those carriers and other airlines have shed tens of thousands of other jobs after urging workers to take buyouts and early retirement. Southwest Airlines, which has never furloughed workers in its nearly 50 years of flying, warned workers earlier this month that it could cut about 7,000 employees unless it can reach cost-cutting deals with labor unions.

The additional support for the struggling sector, reported earlier by Reuters, would keep airline workers on payroll until the end of March, if approved.

The first round of aid expired without a meaningful rebound in air travel, even ahead of major holidays like Thanksgiving and Christmas. Carriers have warned that bookings have declined as coronavirus inspections spiked and new travel restrictions were introduced, hurting their ability to rein in cash burn.

The Transportation Security Administration on Sunday said it screened 1.07 million people at U.S. airports, up 25% from week earlier but less than half of the nearly 2.5 million people it screened a year ago.

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