SFGate: Delta announces up to 7,000 job cuts

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This article was sent to you by someone who found it on SFGate.
The original article can be found on SFGate.com here:
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inancial0925EDT0502.DTL
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Wednesday, September 8, 2004 (AP)
Delta announces up to 7,000 job cuts
HARRY R. WEBER, AP Business Writer


   (09-08) 06:25 PDT ATLANTA (AP) --
   Delta Air Lines will cut up to 7,000 jobs, or 10 percent of its overall
work force, cut wages and pull back at its Dallas-Fort Worth airport hub
as part of a sweeping restructuring plan that could still leave it
vulnerable to needing to file for bankruptcy, company CEO Gerald Grinstein
said Wednesday.
   The job cuts will come over the next 18 months, he said.
   Delta will no longer use the Dallas-Fort Worth airport as one of its four
hubs, Grinstein said during a meeting with 300 of the company's middle
managers. Instead, Delta will expand its hubs in Cincinnati and Salt Lake
City with redeployed aircraft from Dallas-Fort Worth.
   There will be a 15 percent reduction in administrative overhead costs,
including management cuts. A reduction in wages will announced by the end
of the month, and employees will be expected to pay larger contributions
for health insurance.
   Grinstein did not specify which jobs would be cut, but did say some
management posts would be included.
   Despite all of these measures, Grinstein said "bankruptcy is a real
possibly."
   "We're working hard and fast to avoid it," Grinstein said. But if the
pilot early retirement issue is not resolved before the end of the month
or if all of the pieces don't come together in the near term, we will have
to restructure through the courts."
   Delta Air Lines Inc., the nation's third-largest carrier, has been warni=
ng
investors for months that it may have to file bankruptcy if it didn't get
deep wage cuts from its pilots. Management said on July 30 it needed a
minimum of $1 billion in concessions from pilots to survive. Pilots had
previously offered up to $705 million, then accused the company of acting
in bad faith when it asked for much more.
   Delta has lost more than $5 billion and reduced its work force by 16,000
in the last three years.
   The changes announced Wednesday are part of Delta's goal to save more th=
an
$5 billion by 2006.
   As of June 30, Delta and its subsidiaries had 70,300 full-time employees
and 842 total aircraft, regulatory filings show. Delta also has several
regional carriers, including Atlantic Southeast Airlines and Comair, and a
low-fare carrier, Song.
   In addition to the Dallas-Fort Worth hub targeted in the cuts, Delta has
hubs in Atlanta, Cincinnati and Salt Lake City. Delta also is a major U.S.
carrier to Europe.
   Last week, rival American Airlines and its regional affiliate said they
would add 70 flights from Dallas-Fort Worth airport by summer 2005.
American, the largest U.S. carrier and a unit of AMR Corp., said it would
increase frequency of flights from DFW to 31 other airports in the United
States and Mexico.
   "This is our home and Dallas-Fort Worth Airport is a key to the long-term
success of our company in an extremely difficult industry environment,"
said Gerard J. Arpey, chairman and chief executive of both American and
parent AMR.

On the Net:
   www.delta.com

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Copyright 2004 AP

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