SF Gate: Southwest flight attendants picnic over contract negotiations

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The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
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ational0324EST0476.DTL
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Wednesday, March 12, 2003 (AP)
Southwest flight attendants picnic over contract negotiations
LEIGH STROPE, Associated Press Writer


   (03-12) 00:34 PST WASHINGTON (AP) --
   Southwest Airlines flight attendants say the prospect of no meal breaks =
at
the nation's most profitable airline is no picnic.
   So, picnic baskets in hand and passing out boxed lunches to their
co-workers, the flight attendants plan to protest Wednesday at airports in
Baltimore, Chicago and Oakland, Calif.
   The demonstrations are aimed at a management proposal to increase working
hours without providing breaks or meals.
   The airline's 7,500 flight attendants are represented by the Transport
Workers Union, which has been negotiating a new contract for nine months.
   Southwest, the nation's only major airline posting profits in an industry
struggling for survival, wants its flight attendants to add 2.5 hours to
their 10.5-hour days, and to cut their time off.
   While other airlines have laid off thousands of workers and slashed
operations since the terrorist attacks, Southwest has not.
   "We really want to keep the Southwest spirit that is so well known, as it
is or even better," said Portia Reddick, a Baltimore-based flight
attendant. But the flight attendants also want their customers to know
about the "quality of life" issues that could affect the upbeat image the
low-cost carrier presents, Reddick said.
   The flight attendants are the airline's only unresolved labor contract.
About 85 percent of Southwest's employees are represented by a union.
   Ed Stewart, spokesman for Dallas-based Southwest, said talks are
continuing. "We think negotiations are proceeding quite productively," he
said. "Make no mistake, we know beyond a shadow of a doubt that we do have
the best flight attendants in the industry."
   Southwest flight attendants have tried repeatedly to successfully
negotiate a 15-minute per day break. Reddick said she often eats lunch on
the plane standing over a trash can, if she gets to eat at all.
Southwest's flight attendants and pilots clean the airplanes between
flights, unlike other airlines that have cleaning crews.
   "There are some small steps we need to take, some quality of life issues
we're speaking to," Reddick said.
   Major airlines lost $7.7 billion in 2001 and more than $10 billion in
2002. In that climate, Southwest now is being forced to examine ways to
cut costs and improve operations. Southwest's earnings plummeted 53
percent last year.
   Since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, major airlines have cut 100,000 jobs,
slashed in-flight food service, hedged fuel costs, closed reservation
centers, installed automatic check-in kiosks and changed flight schedules
at hubs to use planes more efficiently.
   The second-largest U.S. airline, United, and US Airways are in bankruptcy
proceedings. Industry officials worry that war with Iraq would further
rattle travelers and drive more carriers into bankruptcy. American
Airlines, the largest carrier, is lining up bankruptcy financing,
according to some reports.
   Unions representing workers at American plan a rally Wednesday on Capitol
Hill to inform the public about the financial crisis facing the industry.

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Copyright 2003 AP

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