NYTimes.com Article: United Tilts With Rivals on Adequacy of Loan Aid

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



This article from NYTimes.com
has been sent to you by psa188@juno.com.



United Tilts With Rivals on Adequacy of Loan Aid

November 25, 2002
By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and MICHELINE MAYNARD






With the fate of United Airlines before a federal loan
guarantee board, competitors of the company are challenging
whether the $5.8 billion in lower wages and other
concessions United says it has extracted from its employees
are enough to keep the airline afloat, even with the
government-backed loans.

But the company and its unions rebutted that notion
yesterday, saying employees were making sacrifices that
would be immediately felt and would help the airline become
more competitive.

The effort by United's competitors illustrates the highly
risky game that is being played out as United maneuvers to
avoid a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing and win $1.8 billion
in loan guarantees from the federal panel, the Air
Transportation Stabilization Board.

UAL, the parent company of United Airlines, is facing a
critical week. On Wednesday, the machinists vote on a
tentative deal that would grant $1.5 billion in
concessions. In the meantime, a $375 million payment on
loans backed by aircraft is scheduled on Dec. 2. If UAL
cannot make or extend the payment, and does not soon
receive the loan guarantees, it will be forced to seek
bankruptcy court protection from creditors.

Competitors are circulating analyses in Washington that
take apart United's latest deals with its pilots, flight
attendants and machinists, arguing that in some cases
United will be paying its employees more than it did at the
beginning of the year, even with the cutbacks.

Over the weekend, officials from United and the unions took
strong exception to the analyses - some of which have been
sent by the airline's competitors to Congress, the Bush
administration and the loan guarantee board in hopes of
dissuading the board from approving the loans. United's
side says the documents are incorrect and mischaracterize
the airline's cost structure. "We have been stunned at how
far other carriers are willing to go to sabotage United's
application," said Paul Whiteford, chairman of the pilots'
union at United. "We invite anyone who doubts the
extraordinary employee sacrifices at United to spend an
afternoon with a group of our pilots."

For months, United's competitors, including Delta and
Continental, have argued that the government should not
prop up an airline they say was poorly managed before the
September 2001 attacks.

An analysis by one competitor that is making the rounds on
Capitol Hill contends that labor costs for United's pilots
will in fact rise 16 percent over the next six years
because pension costs more than offset the savings from the
wage concessions. The analysis argued further that when
compared with what pilots earned in October 2000, before
their most recent contract, hourly rates are as much as
17.7 percent higher even after the concessions, based on
the type of aircraft each pilot flies.

Both the union, the Air Line Pilots Association, and the
company disagreed strongly with these calculations, saying
that even including pension costs, the airline's total
labor expense would drop.

And officials of the pilots said that pension expenses
would still rise even if pilots accepted far sharper pay
cuts, because assumptions about pension expenses are made
years in advance of when retirees are paid.

Moreover, they said, United plans to retire many of its
largest planes, the Boeing 747-400's, for which pilots are
paid the most to fly - meaning that average hourly rates
will drop sharply once that occurs.

Another competitor of United's, in documents submitted to
the loan guarantee board, argues that the airline's
high-cost contracts with its ramp agents and machinists are
to blame for its costs, not the impact of terrorist acts,
as United has argued.

"United's current financial condition is largely the result
of its labor agreements, which saddled United with high
labor costs - not the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks," the
analysis said.

Frederic F. Brace III, UAL's chief financial officer,
acknowledged that the airline had based its previous labor
contracts, negotiated in 2000, on the assumption that
business travel would remain strong. But he said in an
interview yesterday that United's revenue had dropped
precipitously in the past year, from an annual rate of
about $18 billion before the attacks, to about $13 billion
now, and that the attacks had hurt the airline far more
than its labor contracts.

A competitor's analysis also contended that a contract
provision calling for ramp agents and machinists to be paid
$498 million, plus interest, in retroactive pay over the
next two years will drain $65 million a quarter for the
next eight quarters. It adds, "25 percent of United's loan
guarantee request would go to fund retroactive pay
increases to just one group of United employees, not to
improve United's financial or operational condition."

But the International Association of Machinists,
representing mechanics and other ground workers, said the
raises were promised by United to employees who had worked
since 1994 without a pay raise. Joe Tiberi, a spokesman for
the union, termed the analysis "ridiculous," adding, "The
concessions are real."

Mr. Brace noted that the loss of four days a year in
vacation, which the machinists promised to give the airline
under their concessions agreement, means that the pay cuts
of 6 to 7 percent, depending on job classification,
actually yield a savings to the airline of 8 to 9 percent.
The pay cuts begin to be restored at the end of 2004. Mr.
Brace offered to pledge to put the loan guarantees into a
separate fund that would not be used for these increases.

Mr. Brace said he was distressed at the level of rancor
that had developed between United and its competitors over
the company's application for loan guarantees.

"I don't have any problem with anyone expressing their
opinion," Mr. Brace said. "But when they try to spin data,
I think it's over the edge."

Mr. Brace said that when wages and benefits are taken into
account, United's pilots earn less than their counterparts
at some leading airlines and that its machinists'
compensation rates are among the industry's lowest.

"The comparison that they are making and the implication
they are trying to project is one that in our case the
facts don't support," he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/25/business/25AIR.html?ex=1039240192&ei=1&en=4d6c4d2e47ad01c5



HOW TO ADVERTISE
---------------------------------
For information on advertising in e-mail newsletters
or other creative advertising opportunities with The
New York Times on the Web, please contact
onlinesales@nytimes.com or visit our online media
kit at http://www.nytimes.com/adinfo

For general information about NYTimes.com, write to
help@nytimes.com.

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]