Heathrow Airport warns of up to 25,000 job cuts as it launches voluntary redundancy scheme

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HEATHROW Airport is warning up to 25,000 workers may lose their jobs as it launches a voluntary redundancy scheme.

The company said it had agreed the scheme with unions as it battles to recover from the coronavirus crisis.

Heathrow Airport is warning up to 25,000 workers may lose their jobs as it launches a voluntary redundancy scheme

Heathrow has also already cut a third of its managerial roles.

Chief executive John Holland-Kaye said today: “Throughout this crisis we have tried to protect frontline jobs but this is no longer sustainable, and we have now agreed a voluntary severance scheme with our union partners.

“While we cannot rule out further job reductions, we will continue to explore options to minimise the number of job losses.”

British Airways, which operates the most flights to and from the airport, has previously announced a plan to cut up to 12,000 jobs.

A total of 76,000 people are employed across 400 different companies at Heathrow, of which 7,000 are directly employed staff.

Mr Holland-Kaye told the City AM podcast last week that cuts being made by airlines mean around 25,000 of these jobs could be at risk.

The travel industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, with passenger numbers at Heathrow hitting an all-time low.

Just 228,000 passengers travelled through the airport in May, down 97 per cent on the same month last year.

Year-on-year demand across the first five months of 2020 is now down 44 per cent.

Airlines have grounded the majority of their aircraft because of the collapse in demand, and Heathrow said today “employment levels are no longer sustainable”.

It said in a statement that the “grim picture is set to continue” as the 14-day quarantine policy came into force on Monday.

It is urging the Government to establish air bridges between the UK and countries where the risk of being infected by coronavirus is deemed to be low, so passengers can avoid having to self-isolate.

This will enable the UK to “restart its economy in earnest, protecting livelihoods in aviation and the sectors that rely on it”, according to the airport.