Audio By Carbonatix
American Airlines Group Inc said Thursday it plans to suspend flights to 15 U.S. airports in October as travel demand remains low as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
Congress has been weighing for weeks whether to grant U.S. airlines another $25 billion in payroll assistance that would keep tens of thousands of airline workers on the job for another six months and extend minimum service requirements.
American said it will cancel just over 700 flights in October to and from those 15 airports but warned it could make additional cuts or could reconsider if Congress provides additional assistance.
“This is the first step as American continues to evaluate its network and plans for additional schedule changes in the coming weeks,” the airline said.
The debate over airline assistance has been stalled as Congress has struggled to reach agreement on a broader coronavirus assistance package.
Some lawmakers think Congress and the White House may not reach a deal until September.
Major U.S. airlines that received portions of $25 billion in payroll assistance were required by the U.S. Transportation Department to maintain minimum flights through Sept. 30, but the government could opt to extend those requirements. American received $5.8 billion in payroll assistance.
Several airlines have been privately warning lawmakers they would be forced to suspend service to some smaller airports without assistance.
American will halt flights to Del Rio, Texas; Dubuque, Iowa; Florence, South Carolina; Greenville, North Carolina; Huntington, West Virginia; Joplin, Missouri; Kalamazoo-Battle Creek, Michigan; Lake Charles, Louisiana; New Haven, Connecticut; New Windsor, New York; Roswell, New Mexico; Sioux City, Iowa; Springfield, Illinois; Stillwater, Oklahoma, and Williamsport, Pennsylvania starting Oct. 7.
Travel and transportation sectors, including hotels, restaurants, performance venues, public transit and passenger railroad Amtrak, are seeking significant government assistance.
The U.S. Travel Association said Wednesday that travel “businesses and workers cannot wait until September or until after the election. Congress must come together immediately to pass meaningful legislation.”
Latest Stories
-
FDI inflows hit US$2.61bn in 2025 – GIPC
37 minutes -
Sixteen pupils killed in Kenya school fire
53 minutes -
Ghana’s tax gap: New levies loom in mid-year budget
53 minutes -
Ashanti region: Mining pit collapse kills 4 illegal miners at Bepotenten Sukuumu
57 minutes -
Asanko Scholarship Programme supports 31 students in the Amansie West and South districts
1 hour -
When the message excludes the customer: Insights from MTN’s tariff announcement on financial inclusion in Ghana
1 hour -
Weija Dam spillage submerges Tetegu, Sampah Valley, and Choice communities
1 hour -
Toyota Ghana launches new RAV4 Hybrid with self-charging technology
1 hour -
ILAPI commends Ministry of Finance on the Inter-Agency Working Group to manage unclaimed funds
1 hour -
Pregnant woman from Ghana detained with child at Dulles Airport, ACLU says
2 hours -
Today’s front pages: Thursday, May 28, 2026
2 hours -
51km of Accra-Kumasi Expressway corridor cleared; compensation plans underway – Finance Minister
2 hours -
AfDB forecasts 5% GDP growth for Ghana as macroeconomic indicators strengthen
2 hours -
Menstrual poverty: United Pension Trustees calls for an end to menstruation stigma
3 hours -
Vaccine survey reveals strong public confidence as Ghana pushes local manufacturing agenda
3 hours