Comair has gotten a two-week extension from parent Delta Air Lines to submit a critical bid for regional flying in the wake of Sunday’s crash.
Comair president Don Bornhorst told employees in a memo today that the Erlanger-based carrier has until Oct. 2 to bid on existing and future flying for a chunk of Delta’s regional flying.
Last week, Delta said it was wanted bids by Sept. 18 for the process that could ultimately shrink Comair’s operations – threatening 19 percent or more of its fleet as well as 600 or more jobs.
“The additional time will allow us to keep our focus for now exactly where it should be: On assisting the families of the passengers and crew involved in the accident of Flight 5191, on lending our full cooperation to the (National Transportation Safety Board) investigation,” Bornhorst wrote.
Delta said on Monday it was considering giving Comair an extension in light of the accident. The Sept. 18 deadline still applies to Comair’s competitors.
The move effectively forced Comair to audition for its job feeding passenger traffic to Delta’s mainline operations. Comair has struggled in vain this year to get giveback deals from its labor unions to lower its costs and contribute to Delta’s financial recovery.
Delta’s decision to solicit bids from outside contractors as well as its subsidiary put up for grabs 27 70-seat jets and an undetermined number of 50-seaters flown by Comair, which is already watching its fleet shrink from previously announced cuts to 144 aircraft by spring from 168 early this year
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