Lawmakers seek U.S. probe on airline handling of COVID funds
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[September 10, 2022]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The leaders of two congressional committees want
a federal probe into whether airlines used government pandemic money to
fund pilot buyouts and early retirements that may have fueled current
pilot shortages, according to a letter released on Friday.
Congress approved $54 billion in three rounds covering much of U.S.
airline payroll costs for 18 months that ended in September 2021.
Airlines accepting government assistance that funded payroll costs were
prohibited from furloughs or firing workers and faced limits on
executive compensation and bans on stock buybacks and dividends.
Major airlines, after losing thousands of employees during the pandemic,
now have more pilots than before COVID-19 and are flying fewer flights
but face higher absentee rates driven by COVID cases. Regional airlines
are still struggling to hire enough pilots, while airlines cut back on
flights this summer to improve performance.
"As a result of pilot shortages, thousands of flights have been delayed
or canceled, wreaking havoc on travel plans for millions of American
taxpayers," House of Representatives' Oversight Committee Chairwoman
Carolyn Maloney and Coronavirus Crisis Committee Chairman James Clyburn
wrote in a Sept. 8 letter to the Treasury Department's inspector
general.
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The committee wants the inspector
general to "complete a thorough review of the federal funding
Treasury has disbursed to airlines to sustain their operations
during the coronavirus pandemic, including an accounting for how the
funds were disbursed and used by each airline recipient."
Airlines for America, a trade group representing
major carriers, said "funds went only to the paychecks of employees,
as stipulated by law" and said it was crucial to ensuring the
industry's viability. "We welcome any additional investigation of
this effective program," the group added.
Out of $54 billion, airlines must repay $14 billion, or 26.2%.
American Airlines received $12.6 billion, Delta Air Lines $11.9
billion, United Airlines $10.9 billion and Southwest Airlines $7.2
billion, according to a U.S. Senate panel.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg faces pressure from
Congress to do more to hold airlines accountable for tens of
thousands of flight cancellations and delays this summer.
A group of 36 state attorneys general on Aug. 31 called on Congress
to give them new authority to investigate passenger complaints.
Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren and Alex Padilla have urged the
Department of Transportation to fine airlines that delay or cancel
flights because of staffing or operational issues.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; writing by Susan Heavey; Editing by
Doina Chiacu and Jonathan Oatis)
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