Private jet firm Wheels Up ceasing operations at JeffCo airport, laying off 65

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An aircraft takes off above a new unleaded fuel truck prior to the director of the Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport, Paul Anslow, announcing the airport’s plans to transition to unleaded fuel last year. (Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)

A private jet charter firm that was bailed out by Delta Airlines last year is laying off 65 employees as it ceases operations at a Jefferson County airport.

New York-based Wheels Up informed the state of the cuts at the Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport in a Wednesday letter.

The layoffs will occur by June 16, Chief People Officer Brian Kedzior wrote, and affect all Wheels Up employees based at the airport except for “selected administrative and office employees that will be maintained due to their role supporting other Wheels Up’s locations.”

Those affected are generally mechanics and technicians, according to the letter.

Wheels Up said in a press release issued after this story was initially published that the cuts in Jefferson County were part of a larger corporate restructuring. The company said it is also closing a maintenance facility in Cincinatti and opening a new one at Palm Beach International Airport in Florida. 

“The facility at PBI represents a strategic shift in the allocation of the company’s maintenance facilities, with an end goal of better aligning resources to the company’s geographic network and flight demand density,” the company said in a statement.

Wheels Up was founded in 2013 and aimed to become the Uber of private jets. The company, whose competitors include NetJets and FlexJet, went public in 2021 when it was bought by a special purpose acquisition company, commonly known as a SPAC deal.

Shares of UP have declined 97% since the company went public, however. Founder Kenny Dichter stepped down as CEO last May. In August, the company said there was “substantial doubt” it could continue operations. A consortium led by Delta, which had already been a major shareholder in the company, subsequently purchased the majority of Wheels Up.

Wheels Up had revenue of $1.25 billion last year, down 21 percent from 2022, according to its financial results released last month.

Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport, which is owned and operated by Jefferson County, said it is the third-busiest airport in Colorado, after Denver International Airport and Centennial Airport. A county spokeswoman didn’t respond to a request for comment regarding how long Wheels Up has operated at the airport. 

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with information from Wheels Up about broader changes within the company.

TDP L

An aircraft takes off above a new unleaded fuel truck prior to the director of the Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport, Paul Anslow, announcing the airport’s plans to transition to unleaded fuel last year. (Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)

A private jet charter firm that was bailed out by Delta Airlines last year is laying off 65 employees as it ceases operations at a Jefferson County airport.

New York-based Wheels Up informed the state of the cuts at the Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport in a Wednesday letter.

The layoffs will occur by June 16, Chief People Officer Brian Kedzior wrote, and affect all Wheels Up employees based at the airport except for “selected administrative and office employees that will be maintained due to their role supporting other Wheels Up’s locations.”

Those affected are generally mechanics and technicians, according to the letter.

Wheels Up said in a press release issued after this story was initially published that the cuts in Jefferson County were part of a larger corporate restructuring. The company said it is also closing a maintenance facility in Cincinatti and opening a new one at Palm Beach International Airport in Florida. 

“The facility at PBI represents a strategic shift in the allocation of the company’s maintenance facilities, with an end goal of better aligning resources to the company’s geographic network and flight demand density,” the company said in a statement.

Wheels Up was founded in 2013 and aimed to become the Uber of private jets. The company, whose competitors include NetJets and FlexJet, went public in 2021 when it was bought by a special purpose acquisition company, commonly known as a SPAC deal.

Shares of UP have declined 97% since the company went public, however. Founder Kenny Dichter stepped down as CEO last May. In August, the company said there was “substantial doubt” it could continue operations. A consortium led by Delta, which had already been a major shareholder in the company, subsequently purchased the majority of Wheels Up.

Wheels Up had revenue of $1.25 billion last year, down 21 percent from 2022, according to its financial results released last month.

Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport, which is owned and operated by Jefferson County, said it is the third-busiest airport in Colorado, after Denver International Airport and Centennial Airport. A county spokeswoman didn’t respond to a request for comment regarding how long Wheels Up has operated at the airport. 

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with information from Wheels Up about broader changes within the company.

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