Bombardier Inc. has announced that 11,000 furloughed employees will likely return to work over the next few weeks, part of some 450,000 Quebecers expected to go back on the job as the province prepares to restart its economy.
The plane-and-train maker said Tuesday it will resume production in Quebec as of May 11, the day set by the provincial government for factories to unlock their doors.
The economic restart will come as welcome news to a company grappling with share-price lows, credit downgrades and a US$9.3-billion debt.
Bombardier shuttered operations and sent 12,400 employees on unpaid leave – 9,000 of them in Quebec – on March 24 as non-essential work ground to a halt across the country.
It said Tuesday employees whose physical presence is not required at plants or service sites will continue to work from home.
The company also said it will draw on the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy, which funds 75 per cent of an employee’s pay up to a maximum of $847.
Earlier Tuesday, Premier Francois Legault said stores with their own entrances will be allowed to open on May 4 outside of the Montreal area and May 11 in the Montreal region, with factories and construction sites across the province allowed to open May 11.
Legault said the province will keep close tabs on the number of COVID-19 cases and the ability of hospitals to respond.
On Monday, he announced elementary schools and daycares across Quebec will reopen by May 19.
Ontario, on the other hand, has given no dates or schedule for lifting COVID restrictions, other than that schools will stay closed until at least the end of May. Premier Doug Ford has been adamant that reopening depends on getting the virus under firm control.
Roughly 3,000 employees work at Bombardier’s private jet assembly plant in Toronto.
“Gradual return-to-work schedules will vary per site,” spokesman Olivier Marcil said in an e-mail, stressing that Quebec operations will start to ramp up in less than two weeks.
About 70 per cent of Bombardier’s Canadian workforce of more than 17,600 employees had been temporarily laid off.
The machinists’ union representing Bombardier said visits to a pair of facilities in the Montreal area last week “revealed a clear improvement in the application of physical distancing measures required by Quebec.”
The affected factories in the Montreal area sit in Mirabel, Saint-Laurent, Dorval and Pointe-Claire, and east of Quebec City in La Pocatiere.
Eric Martel, who took over as CEO from Alain Bellemare earlier this month, continues to confront sobering questions about the future of a debt-laden Quebec institution that has become a penny stock with junk-status credit ratings as it slims down to a single revenue stream – private planes – just as the economy plunges into a downturn.
National Bank analyst Cameron Doerksen pointed to weakening demand for business jets, further trimming his Bombardier forecast to 123 deliveries from 145 this year and to 108 deliveries from 120 in 2021.
“Cash remains tight,” he said in a research note last week. When the crisis kicked off, Bombardier had about US$3.1 billion in cash on hand, including roughly US$500 million from the sale of its remaining stake in the A220 commercial jetliner program – formerly known as the C Series – and on top of US$1.3 billion in available credit.
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