KEY POINTS
  • American and other airlines are aggressively hiring after urging thousands to take buyouts during the Covid pandemic.
  • American's CEO plans to tell a Senate committee that it has hired about 16,000 employees this year.
  • Pilots, flight attendants, ramp workers and customer service agents are in high demand across the industry.

In this article

An airline employee walks past empty American Airlines check-in terminals at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, on May 12, 2020.

American Airlines is planning to hire 18,000 workers in 2022, on top of thousands of new employees this year to cater to a rebound in travel, CEO Doug Parker plans to tell lawmakers during a hearing about flight disruptions in recent months.

The CEOs of American, United Airlines and Southwest Airlines, and Delta Air Lines' chief of operations, will face questions Wednesday from the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation about mass flight cancellations and staffing struggles despite roughly $54 billion in federal payroll aid doled out to the airline industry to soften the Covid pandemic's impact.

In this article