Layoff Numbers
Moderators: sky's the limit, sepia, Sulako, North Shore
Layoff Numbers
Projected Pilot layoffs from the largest passenger carriers as of June 01st (including CEWS) -
Air Canada - 600/4400 13.6%* (adding in pay reduction of 55 hours vs 75 hours produces a total effective layoff of 36.6%)
WestJet/Swoop/Encore - 1700/2268 74.9%
Jazz - 675/1530 44%* (active pilots approximately 1330 produces an effective layoff closer to 50%)
Skyregional - 227/287 79%
Transat - 100%
Sunwing - 100%
Porter - 100%
Industry specific aid in Canada - zero * (collateralized loans via EDC)
Industry specific aid in US - $50 Billion
Pilot layoffs from US passenger airlines - zero* (protections in place until Sept 30 only)
Air Canada - 600/4400 13.6%* (adding in pay reduction of 55 hours vs 75 hours produces a total effective layoff of 36.6%)
WestJet/Swoop/Encore - 1700/2268 74.9%
Jazz - 675/1530 44%* (active pilots approximately 1330 produces an effective layoff closer to 50%)
Skyregional - 227/287 79%
Transat - 100%
Sunwing - 100%
Porter - 100%
Industry specific aid in Canada - zero * (collateralized loans via EDC)
Industry specific aid in US - $50 Billion
Pilot layoffs from US passenger airlines - zero* (protections in place until Sept 30 only)
Re: Layoff Numbers
Due to the CEWS no AC pilot is currently furloughed, the first 162 will be laid off on June 6th (or later if the program is extended).
At the start of the year AC projected a requirement for over 5000 pilots to crew the airline into next spring. The MOA restricts layoffs to no more than 600 until September, as Rudder mentioned with pilots being paid a reduced 55hours/month. After September further lay offs could take place depending on the number of pilots deemed to be surplus on the upcoming bid.
There are roughly 4480 seniority numbers including the 162 that joined in 2020, with 600 reductions and pilots being paid 55 hours as opposed to 80 and about 80 that took the ERIP who weren't already posted as retired:
5000 pilots x 80 hours = 400,000 Pilot hours/month
3800 Pilots x 55 hours = 209,000 Pilot hours/month
52% of the original planned flying hours. Obviously more than presently required.
Hard to predict the timeline of the bid and what the airline projects the timeline of any recovery to be, it would almost seem impossible to predict with any accuracy. You have to hope the April/May represents 'rock bottom' at 10% at this point. There are layoff payouts within the CA agreement that add to the cost of furloughing pilots for only short periods as well as retraining costs. In any case we'll get some insight into what AC is predicting within the week.
At the start of the year AC projected a requirement for over 5000 pilots to crew the airline into next spring. The MOA restricts layoffs to no more than 600 until September, as Rudder mentioned with pilots being paid a reduced 55hours/month. After September further lay offs could take place depending on the number of pilots deemed to be surplus on the upcoming bid.
There are roughly 4480 seniority numbers including the 162 that joined in 2020, with 600 reductions and pilots being paid 55 hours as opposed to 80 and about 80 that took the ERIP who weren't already posted as retired:
5000 pilots x 80 hours = 400,000 Pilot hours/month
3800 Pilots x 55 hours = 209,000 Pilot hours/month
52% of the original planned flying hours. Obviously more than presently required.
Hard to predict the timeline of the bid and what the airline projects the timeline of any recovery to be, it would almost seem impossible to predict with any accuracy. You have to hope the April/May represents 'rock bottom' at 10% at this point. There are layoff payouts within the CA agreement that add to the cost of furloughing pilots for only short periods as well as retraining costs. In any case we'll get some insight into what AC is predicting within the week.
Re: Layoff Numbers
Thx for the update/clarification.TheStig wrote: ↑Thu Apr 16, 2020 7:46 am
Hard to predict the timeline of the bid and what the airline projects the timeline of any recovery to be, it would almost seem impossible to predict with any accuracy. You have to hope the April/May represents 'rock bottom' at 10% at this point. There are layoff payouts within the CA agreement that add to the cost of furloughing pilots for only short periods as well as retraining costs. In any case we'll get some insight into what AC is predicting within the week.
US carriers now making inquiries of Treasury Dept to see if running and implementing results of a reduction bid (with layoffs delayed to Oct 01) would be compliant with the terms of the grants.
Certainly appears that a lot of planning is looking at 2021 rather than the next few months of 2020.
Best of luck.
Re: Layoff Numbers
Due to the CEWS no AT pilot is currently furloughed until June 6th (or later if the program is extended).
Re: Layoff Numbers
Thx.
And just so everybody understands, an employer cannot claim nor can employee receive the CEWS subsidy via company payroll unless they have been identified as surplus and would otherwise be subject to layoff.
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Re: Layoff Numbers
That's incorrect. All employees are eligible for the CEWS, not just those identified as surplus, as long as their company has suffered a drop in gross revenues of at least 15% in March, and 30% in April and May.
Re: Layoff Numbers
Thx.indieadventurer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 16, 2020 8:24 am
That's incorrect. All employees are eligible for the CEWS, not just those identified as surplus, as long as their company has suffered a drop in gross revenues of at least 15% in March, and 30% in April and May.
https://www.canada.ca/en/department-fin ... bsidy.html
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Re: Layoff Numbers
Regarding the governments 100% refund for employer EI and CPP contributions, that is only in effect for employees who are deemed surplus.
Re: Layoff Numbers
CEWS is still a lay-off. There is no work for these people. Is Transat paying the top-up portion? How about Jazz? Sunwing, Wj?
Re: Layoff Numbers
CEWS is just a way for the government to cook the books and keep the unemployment numbers artificially low. If/when the general public starts to wake up to the real impact of our reaction to this crisis there is bound to be backlash against government/healthcare officials.
Flame away if you must.
Flame away if you must.
Re: Layoff Numbers
There are additional ways to view it, not that I think you are totally wrong. But if you use our industry as an example, there are retraining costs and time delays which will cost money when things do start to turn around. If you can take the little available flying and spread it out among the group, to keep everyone current there won't be large training time/costs associated when we restart compared to if more than half the industry is on EI. Obviously the longer this goes on, the value of that type of plan will decrease.HavaJava wrote: ↑Thu Apr 16, 2020 10:46 am CEWS is just a way for the government to cook the books and keep the unemployment numbers artificially low. If/when the general public starts to wake up to the real impact of our reaction to this crisis there is bound to be backlash against government/healthcare officials.
Flame away if you must.
The example works well in our industry, but it applies to most industries. To layoff and hire/recall within a relatively short timeline has time/costs that will slow recovery, and the CEWS can keep workers qualified to pick back up relatively quickly.
Re: Layoff Numbers
Don’t be fooled. They’re rehiring people and putting them back on payroll but they’re not physically coming back to work or doing anything.
There will be retraining/certification costs for every licensed position even if TC gives extensions...they can’t last for months.
There will be retraining/certification costs for every licensed position even if TC gives extensions...they can’t last for months.
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Re: Layoff Numbers
Someone correct me if I am wrong but the way I read the CEWS literature, maximum benefit is 847 per week. That will cover a bit of the payroll but most crew make more than that, so how long can operators sustain paying out the balance?
Stating the obvious, this is not good.
Stating the obvious, this is not good.
Attempting to understand the world. I have not succeeded.
veni, vidi,...... vici non fecit.
veni, vidi,...... vici non fecit.
Re: Layoff Numbers
Some airline employers are treating CEWS compensated employees as ‘inactive’. Not maintaining technical currency. Not scheduled for work. Not on standby. Not available to perform their regular job function. Some employers want RAIC, parking passes, other company issue assets returned.fishface wrote: ↑Thu Apr 16, 2020 1:09 pm Don’t be fooled. They’re rehiring people and putting them back on payroll but they’re not physically coming back to work or doing anything.
There will be retraining/certification costs for every licensed position even if TC gives extensions...they can’t last for months.
I presume each employer is setting their own rules but for many employers the expectation of next status after CEWS is layoff.
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Re: Layoff Numbers
Well, some operators aren't even topping up the restconfusedalot wrote: ↑Thu Apr 16, 2020 1:17 pm Someone correct me if I am wrong but the way I read the CEWS literature, maximum benefit is 847 per week. That will cover a bit of the payroll but most crew make more than that, so how long can operators sustain paying out the balance?
Stating the obvious, this is not good.
Re: Layoff Numbers
The only operator that I have heard (anecdotally) is topping up to 100% is Flair.flyingcanuck wrote: ↑Thu Apr 16, 2020 2:04 pmWell, some operators aren't even topping up the restconfusedalot wrote: ↑Thu Apr 16, 2020 1:17 pm Someone correct me if I am wrong but the way I read the CEWS literature, maximum benefit is 847 per week. That will cover a bit of the payroll but most crew make more than that, so how long can operators sustain paying out the balance?
Stating the obvious, this is not good.
Anybody else?
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Re: Layoff Numbers
I've heard Flair filed a grievance about the CEWS. I'm not sure of the details though.
At SWG, we have only just received word that the company will participate in the CEWS program. We definitely won't be getting a top-up though.
Re: Layoff Numbers
Source?At SWG, we have only just received word that the company will participate in the CEWS program. We definitely won't be getting a top-up though.
Sunwing wasn't taking part...
I'd still like to see some aid package that helps the actual airlines survive this.
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Re: Layoff Numbers
With my tax dollars funding payroll and no money spent on fuel they don’t need any more. Any company that can’t survive a couple of months with the two largest expenses gone doesn’t deserve to stay in business
Re: Layoff Numbers
That's the dumbest thing I've heard in a while. Even your high and mighty Air Canada wont make it long without some sort of bailout.With my tax dollars funding payroll and no money spent on fuel they don’t need any more. Any company that can’t survive a couple of months with the two largest expenses gone doesn’t deserve to stay in business
A couple of months??? Get a grip.
Tax dollars spent on payroll?? - There was no payroll until this government sham came along. A lot of companies shed a large part or even all of their payroll. What about leases, rent, taxes, hell - I'd hate to see Air Canada's electric bill for the month. Lots of other huge expenses and no income....75% of the worlds airlines wont last more than 3 months without help. And almost all wont make it past 6 months. Our airlines need an aid package now!