Yahoo Finance Presents: Pete Buttigieg

In This Article:

U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg joins Yahoo Finance’s Editor-in-Chief Andy Serwer to discuss the current situation with the airlines, how the money from the infrastructure bill is being distributed and used, as well as his thoughts on the recent vote on same-sex marriage.

Video Transcript

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ANDY SERWER: Welcome to Yahoo Finance Presents. I'm Andy Serwer, and I'm joined now by Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Secretary Buttigieg, welcome.

PETE BUTTIGIEG: Hi, thanks for having me. Good to be with you.

ANDY SERWER: to talk about. I know you're keen to have a conversation about airports. I want to start with airlines, though, and ask you about the wave of flight cancellations and delays we've seen this summer. One bit of context is the airlines received billions of dollars in bailout money during COVID and aid during COVID. Do they owe consumers more than what they're giving them now? And have they held up their end of the bargain?

PETE BUTTIGIEG: Well I think any time you sell a ticket and collect revenue in exchange for a promise to get somebody from point A to point B, you need to be prepared to actually do that. And that's a conversation we've been pressing the airlines a lot on these last few weeks. Look, it is great news that demand has returned-- that passengers have both the income and the inclination to get back in the skies after everything that our country has been through and that the aviation sector has been through.

But now that they are back, it's very important that the airlines and the system are prepared to get them where they need to be. Now, I'll tell you. Since I gathered airline leaders together shortly after the Memorial Day travel weekend where we saw a really unacceptable level of cancellations and delays, we've seen a lot of steps that have been underway, including accelerated work to recruit and train pilots, improved pay for aviation crews, which I think is a very obvious and important way to help deal with the perceived shortages in staffing-- more resources going into customer service.

And I think that those steps have made a difference. Our last couple of weekends, we've seen the cancellation rate go back below 2%, which is more in line with what you've seen historically. But there's still a lot of work to do. And we'll do everything that we can to help as a department. We'll look to the airlines to do the right thing and collaborate with them there. And when and if they don't do the right thing, that's what our enforcement powers are for. And we'll use those too when and if it's appropriate.