Yes. AIR management are touting a move from "survive" to "revive". Personally I think thats a bit premature. However, I suppose they are trying to spin it that way in order to try and prevent so much IP flying out the door in search market rates of pay. It must be hard for people to stay when they have taken a 30% haircut only to have even higher paid consultants come in to backfill the shortfall
Another Govt Loan may be needed to keep all the fancy consultants sucked into the fusilage onboard in the land of honey ..
gotta be a sucker or two somewhere out of all this that will be left quite a few bucks, an arm & leg down .. surely ?
AIR and AIA seem to spending heaps on champagne, bands etc etc 'celebrating' this bubble
Don't waste shareholders money - just fly punters back and forth
This is the first relatively normal international service we've had for over a year. Let them have some sparking wine on the first day, it's something to celebrate.
“Air New Zealand Ltd said of the 5,200 passengers booked on Monday, 59% were travelling to New Zealand.“
I’ve skipped over the more lopsided figure given earlier in the article as it seemed to apply to the week prior to the bubble, when more of the traffic is likely to be broader international returns, transiting in via Aus.
Hope the border worker at Auckland Airport testing positive doesn't pop the bubble
Border worker was fully vaccinated: per overseas data it is very rare for a fully vaccinated person to spread CV to others. chances of a community outbreak that would "pop the (travel) bubble" are very low.
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