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Relief for hundreds of Monarch workers in Birmingham

Around 280 jobs preserved at airport base as engineering and service division to continue as standalone business

Monarch planes grounded at Birmingham Airport

Around 280 jobs based at Birmingham Airport have been preserved after the engineering arm of collapsed airline Monarch announced it would continue as a standalone business.

In 2013, Monarch Aircraft Engineering opened a giant new hangar the size of four football pitches at the airport where it provides jet maintenance and testing services to Monarch and other companies on a contract basis.

But the group said Monarch Airlines going into administration would not affect business there and at its other º£½ÇÊÓÆµ hubs, due in part to it recently winning a major new contract with Virgin Atlantic Airlines which will be serviced out of Birmingham.

Around 110,000 people are believed to be stranded abroad as they are unable to take Monarch flights back to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ while travellers expecting to leave the country today with Monarch have been told to stay away from º£½ÇÊÓÆµ airports as no flights will depart.

Monarch Aircraft Engineering employs more than 730 staff at six locations in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and four overseas.

While Monarch Airlines was a significant customer, the company says it is focussing now on servicing its other existing clients and securing new business.

Monarch Aircraft Engineering has just won a "new significant contract" from Virgin Atlantic Airlines for which it will carry out checks on its Boeing fleet until 2021 at its base at Birmingham Airport.

Monarch Aircraft Engineering's hangar opened at Birmingham Airport in 2013

And at the Paris Air Show in June, the company announced a joint venture partnership with Boeing Global Services to collaborate on securing additional third-party fleet servicing agreements.