Canada's WestJet cuts staff, blames new testing requirements
WestJet has announced it will further prune its network to about 80% of last year's level, including a 93% reduction in international operations, in response to what it termed the "hasty" introduction of new testing requirements by the Canadian government. The airline said that in tandem with the network cuts, around 1,000 staff members will be stood down through a combination of furloughs, temporary layoffs, unpaid leaves and reduced hours. It will also freeze hiring. "Immediately following the federal government's inbound testing announcement on December 31, and with the continuation of the 14-day quarantine, we saw significant reductions in new bookings and unprecedented cancellations. The entire travel industry and its customers are again on the receiving end of incoherent and inconsistent government policy," President and CE Ed Sims said. The airline was responding to the new PCR testing requirement announced by the government on January 3 and in force since January 7. The carrier said that following the new round of cuts, it would only operate around 150 departures a day, a level last seen in 2001.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2021-01-13/unaligned/canadas-westjet-cuts-staff-blames-new-testing-requirements
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Canada's WestJet cuts staff, blames new testing requirements
WestJet has announced it will further prune its network to about 80% of last year's level, including a 93% reduction in international operations, in response to what it termed the "hasty" introduction of new testing requirements by the Canadian government. The airline said that in tandem with the network cuts, around 1,000 staff members will be stood down through a combination of furloughs, temporary layoffs, unpaid leaves and reduced hours. It will also freeze hiring. "Immediately following the federal government's inbound testing announcement on December 31, and with the continuation of the 14-day quarantine, we saw significant reductions in new bookings and unprecedented cancellations. The entire travel industry and its customers are again on the receiving end of incoherent and inconsistent government policy," President and CE Ed Sims said. The airline was responding to the new PCR testing requirement announced by the government on January 3 and in force since January 7. The carrier said that following the new round of cuts, it would only operate around 150 departures a day, a level last seen in 2001.<br/>