The crisis meetings at Sun Country Airlines started happening first thing every morning in mid-March, just as air travelers began canceling flight plans because of the coronavirus.
Dispatchers, operations executives and crew planners decided what flights to cut, looking at where planes and crews were and what airport contracts Sun Country needed to uphold. Chief Executive Jude Bricker calls those days "dramatically terrible."
That's when a few business decisions made just before COVID-19 gripped the country proved fortunate for the scrappy, Minnesota-based airline. It took back control of ground operations and employment at its main hub, Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. And a new contract to fly Amazon Air, sometimes called Prime Air, cargo operations for the giant e-commerce company began in May.
When the April-to-June quarter ended, Sun Country achieved something no other U.S. airline did: a pretax profit.
"We're not out of the woods, but we are outperforming the rest of the industry and that's a unique circumstance for Sun Country to be in," Bricker said in an extensive interview this month.
The profit was small, around $8 million, and would have been a loss without government help. But as other airlines foreshadow big job cuts with the looming end of government aid, Sun Country may be able to hang on to its 1,500 workers.
Bricker said staffing decisions are made month-to-month. At this point, he added, "We don't have plans for furloughs in October. I think we will be OK through the end of the year."
The global spread of the novel coronavirus and the ensuing pandemic has sent the airline industry into its worst-ever economic crisis. This past spring, air travel came to a near halt as shelter-in-place orders took hold across the U.S. and corporate policies forbade workers from traveling for business.