NYTimes.com Article: Airlines Announce Cutbacks as They Prepare for War

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Airlines Announce Cutbacks as They Prepare for War

March 19, 2003
By MICHELINE MAYNARD and EDWARD WONG






The airline industry, already crippled by a weak economy,
scrambled yesterday to prepare for the effect of a war with
Iraq by suspending and eliminating flights and warning
employees to expect emergency cuts in wages and benefits
amid signs that air traffic is declining.

Continental Airlines said yesterday that on April 6 it
would cut seven flights a week, from Newark, Cleveland and
Houston to London, Paris and Tokyo because of a drop in
passenger demand. The Israeli airline El Al, said it was
cutting 29 flights a week, 15 percent of its capacity,
including 2 to New York, because its passenger levels have
dropped 40 percent so far this month. British Airways said
that flights to and from Kuwait and Israel would be
suspended indefinitely, while Swiss International Air Lines
is suspending two of its six weekly flights between Zurich
and Cairo.

United Airlines, which warned last week that it would cut
its capacity 10 percent to 12 percent in the event of war,
said it was watching traffic "day by day" to determine when
to act. American Airlines and Southwest Airlines said they
would wait for a military conflict to start before
determining whether to cut back, while US Airways said it
had no plans to reduce its flights.

Still, both US Airways, whose bankruptcy restructuring was
approved by a judge yesterday, and United, also operating
under bankruptcy protection, warned employees that they
might soon face emergency cuts in wages and benefits
because of a decline in bookings caused by fears of a war.

"There's no question that the airlines have felt the
effect" of passengers' reluctance to book tickets in the
face of a war, said Sandy Rederer, an aviation industry
consultant in Arlington, Va.

One measure aimed at helping the airlines is to be
introduced in Congress today. The Aviation Stabilization
Act of 2003 would give airlines access to $3 billion of the
$10 billion in federal money that was authorized after the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. This would help offset a spike
in jet fuel prices brought on by a war, according to an
advance draft of the measure.

The bill would also reimburse airlines for the $312 million
cost of reinforcing cockpit doors and would guarantee
federal terrorism insurance for four years, without an
increase in premiums. It would also authorize the
Transportation Department to reimburse airlines for losses
from a war, a proposal that is likely to stir debate.
"That's a stretch," said a senior executive in the
transportation industry, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity.

But Representative James L. Oberstar, Democrat of
Minnesota, who planned to introduce the bill, said he would
argue in favor of reimbursing the carriers.

Mr. Oberstar predicted traffic would slump, as it did in
reaction to the Persian Gulf war in 1991, and he said the
industry would vitally need relief. "This is a proposal
based on experience," he said.

In Washington, Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta
said the Bush administration was prepared to "move very
quickly" to help the air carriers in the event of war.

Despite the promises of assistance, Standard & Poor's, the
credit rating agency, placed nine domestic airlines and two
European carriers on credit watch with negative
implications, citing the prospect that a war would lead to
increases in already high fuel prices and would cause
bookings to fall further.

Airlines have acknowledged in recent days that their
bookings through spring have fallen precipitously,
especially on overseas flights. In response, they have
eased restrictions placed on tickets to try to reassure
passengers nervous about making travel plans.

But Mr. Rederer said the airlines had themselves to blame
for failing to predict weaker traffic. For too long, he
said, the airlines based their schedules on forecasts that
air travel would rebound this year from a sluggish 2002,
failing to sense that travelers' sentiment had shifted.

The Federal Aviation Administration released a report
yesterday predicting that domestic and international travel
would increase this year, though it said a war would put
those projections at risk. The F.A.A. said that domestic
traffic would climb 3.5 percent and that international
traffic would rise 4.7 percent. The report was released
only a few days after the Air Transport Association, the
industry's main trade group, warned that airlines could
lose $10.7 billion this year and be forced to cut up to
70,000 jobs, if a long war ensues.

Daniel Solon, an industry analyst with Avmark International
in London, said that any predictions of a recovery this
year were overly optimistic. "Everybody's been sitting
around telling themselves that after the shooting is over,
it'll all be over," he said. "I happen to be bearish on
that. I think we'll continue to see embedded weakness in
the economy."

No airlines are more vulnerable to weaker traffic than the
industry's two bankrupt carriers, United and US Airways.

On Monday, United said in a filing in federal bankruptcy
court that it might have to impose 9 percent
across-the-board wage and benefit cuts on all its
employees, on top of $1 billion in concessions that it
ordered soon after filing for bankruptcy in December.

United also said in the filing that it expected that its
competitors would be as hard hit as it has been. The
company said that in the last several weeks, its domestic
bookings had fallen while its international bookings had
dropped 30 percent. As a result, United said it expected
revenue through June to be nearly $300 million lower than
it planned in December, when it filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection.

US Airways said in bankruptcy court yesterday that a war
might prompt it to impose a 5 percent cut on its employees'
pay and benefits, on top of concessions it had already
obtained. It also said that a war might force it to reduce
the number of aircraft it flies, something that it had
promised its unions it would not do under normal
conditions.

The third-most-vulnerable carrier is American, which is
negotiating with its unions on $1.8 billion in wage and
benefit concessions it said were necessary for it to avoid
bankruptcy. A spokesman for American, Todd Burke, said the
airline planned only one set of concessions and did not
plan to impose emergency cuts.

British Airways said yesterday that it was canceling
several flights between London and the Middle East. The
airline will cut its service today to Tel Aviv to one
flight a day from two, then indefinitely suspend all such
flights starting tomorrow. The single daily flight from
London to Kuwait, with a stop in Abu Dhabi on the return
leg, will be suspended starting today.

The airline is also suspending one of two daily flights
between London and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

British Airways flies Boeing 777's with four classes of
cabins on its Middle East routes. Flights that go over the
region to or from Asia will be rerouted. Flights that once
switched crews in the Middle East will now do that during a
stop in Cyprus because of security concerns.

"We hope to resume services to Kuwait as soon as possible,
but will only do so when we feel it's absolutely safe and
the commercial demand returns," said John Lampl, a company
spokesman.

Jim Faulkner, a spokesman for Air France, said planners in
Paris were monitoring traffic on its routes to see whether
it needed to cut any flights. Planning has become more
difficult because passengers are booking their flights
closer to the date of travel, he said.

Thai Airways is canceling flights starting tomorrow from
Bangkok to Kuwait and Bahrain.

Delta Air Lines did not make any schedule changes yesterday
but said it would allow some passengers with restricted
trans-Atlantic tickets to change their destinations, cabin
classes or dates of travel without having to pay the
standard $200 fee. This policy applies to tickets bought
from March 5 to March 31. Such tickets can be changed
before May 31 and would be good for travel until the end of
the year.

United Airlines announced a similar policy yesterday,
though it said its waiver of the standard change fee would
apply to any ticket for travel originally scheduled for May
18 or earlier and issued on or before March 31. The company
said travelers would need to change the ticket before
either the originally scheduled date or April 19, whichever
comes first.


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/19/business/19AIR.html?ex=1049103103&ei=1&en=c0abf19a76f3c7f6



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