Branson's Virgin Orbit to recall small team from near-total furlough

Reuters

Published Mar 21, 2023 11:07PM ET

Updated Mar 22, 2023 12:41AM ET

By Joey Roulette

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit plans to recall on Thursday a small group of employees from a near company-wide furlough to work on rocket upgrades, an email to staff said, with the company confirming some team members would return.

The number of employees due to come back to work at the cash-strapped company was not clear, but in the email seen by Reuters sent on Tuesday evening, Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart said it involved a "small subset" of employees.

The furlough of nearly all of Virgin Orbit's some 750 staff began on March 16, after the company struggled in recent months to raise funds and suffered a high-profile rocket failure in January during its first launch attempt out of Britain.

The move, in which only employees critical to company functions would remain, was intended to buy Virgin Orbit more time to finalize an investment plan and stave off bankruptcy.

The small group of employees asked to return to work had been notified directly by their managers, according to a person familiar with the plan, while those not tapped would have their furlough extended to Monday, Hart said in the email.

Discussions over Virgin Orbit's investment plan to stave off bankruptcy were ongoing, said a second person familiar with the process. The people spoke anonymously to discuss internal company matters.

Hart said in the email that "several teams have been working around the clock as we continue to engage with investors and other stakeholders."

A Virgin Orbit spokesperson said in a statement that the company was targeting an "incremental resumption" of operations to support its next launch.