Delta to activate 400 idled pilots in sign of travel optimism
Delta will return 400 pilots to full flying status by this summer, betting that the expansion of coronavirus vaccinations will trigger a rebound in travel demand. The plan is “well ahead” of when the company originally estimated it would restore pilots to full active status, John Laughter, Delta senior vice president of operations, said in a Jan. 21 memo. The decision was based in part on available training capacity in March and April and facilitated by Delta’s $2.9b share of a second round of federal payroll aid for US carriers. The improved outlook builds on Delta’s expectation that it will end daily cash losses in the second quarter, and potentially turn a profit in the third. The upbeat comments -- in contrast to a more dour outlook last week from United Holdings Inc. -- have spurred hopes that a recovery will begin after a tough first quarter in which Delta expects to burn as much as $15m a day. “We’re cautiously optimistic that demand will increase as vaccinations roll out across the world, and we look forward to restoring all affected pilots back to full flying status as the recovery continues,” Laughter said. Delta declined to comment about future flight capacity or schedule planning. The airline’s pilots in November approved an agreement that protected them from furloughs this year in exchange for cutting monthly flying an average of 2% for each aviator. Delta had warned that 1,713 would be furloughed if a cost-cutting plan wasn’t in place. <br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2021-01-26/sky/delta-to-activate-400-idled-pilots-in-sign-of-travel-optimism
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Delta to activate 400 idled pilots in sign of travel optimism
Delta will return 400 pilots to full flying status by this summer, betting that the expansion of coronavirus vaccinations will trigger a rebound in travel demand. The plan is “well ahead” of when the company originally estimated it would restore pilots to full active status, John Laughter, Delta senior vice president of operations, said in a Jan. 21 memo. The decision was based in part on available training capacity in March and April and facilitated by Delta’s $2.9b share of a second round of federal payroll aid for US carriers. The improved outlook builds on Delta’s expectation that it will end daily cash losses in the second quarter, and potentially turn a profit in the third. The upbeat comments -- in contrast to a more dour outlook last week from United Holdings Inc. -- have spurred hopes that a recovery will begin after a tough first quarter in which Delta expects to burn as much as $15m a day. “We’re cautiously optimistic that demand will increase as vaccinations roll out across the world, and we look forward to restoring all affected pilots back to full flying status as the recovery continues,” Laughter said. Delta declined to comment about future flight capacity or schedule planning. The airline’s pilots in November approved an agreement that protected them from furloughs this year in exchange for cutting monthly flying an average of 2% for each aviator. Delta had warned that 1,713 would be furloughed if a cost-cutting plan wasn’t in place. <br/>