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    Delta Admits Strike Threat Cost Millions

ATLANTA ? Delta Air Lines Inc. asked a bankruptcy judge Tuesday to 
approve its agreement with pilots for about $280 million in annual 
contract concessions and acknowledged for the first time that the threat 
of a pilots strike had cost the carrier millions of dollars per week.

In a filing with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York, the nation's No. 
3 carrier said the agreement will save its debtors hundreds of millions 
a year "which is vital to the Debtors' transformation and long-term 
survival."

Delta, which filed for bankruptcy protection in September, previously 
agreed to $1 billion in annual concessions, including a 32.5 percent 
wage cut, in a five-year deal in 2004. It then sought an additional $325 
million in cuts from its nearly 6,000 pilots, who threatened to strike 
as an April 15 deadline for an agreement approached.

"Even the threat of a pilot strike was costing Delta millions of dollars 
per week in lost sales, as concerned passengers and shippers booked 
flights on other airlines," Delta said in its filing, adding to its 
argument that the court should accept the pilot agreement.

___

May 9, 2006 - 10:32 p.m. Copyright 2006, The Associated Press. The 
information contained in the AP Online news report may not be published, 
broadcast or redistributed without the prior written authority of The 
Associated Press.

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