SFGate: Airline Mergers Could Raise Fares in '07

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Thursday, December 14, 2006 (AP)
Airline Mergers Could Raise Fares in '07
By DAVE CARPENTER, AP Business Writer


   (12-14) 05:20 PST DALLAS (AP) --

   Even if the leaders of United and Continental agree to merge their
airlines, the hard work of combining two work forces with different unions
and conflicting interests will remain.

   The history of the airline industry is littered with cases in which peace
in the boardroom was followed by rancor among co-workers at 30,000 feet.

   It's been nearly six years since American Airlines' parent bought Trans
World Airlines, but TWA flight attendants are still so mad about their
treatment by new colleagues that they picketed outside the American union
hall this fall.

   Most merger-related disputes are about job security in the heavily
unionized industry.

   The TWA flight attendants lost their jobs after 9-11 because the American
attendants' union stripped them of seniority. In 1999, American's pilots
staged a sickout that canceled more than 6,000 flights to protest the
acquisition of Reno Air — they feared losing assignments to the
lower-paid pilots from the smaller carrier.

   Employees at UAL Corp.'s United Airlines and Continental Airlines Inc.
were buzzing about the merger talk Wednesday.

   Workers at both carriers have taken pay cuts since 2001, but the slashing
was far worse at United, which entered bankruptcy protection. United
terminated its pension plans; Continental did not.

   "Now those people could be working side by side. How do you meld happy
employees with unhappy ones?" said a veteran Continental flight attendant,
who spoke on condition of anonymity because she said her job could be
threatened.

   But optimists said the two carriers have complementary route structures
— United is strong on the West Coast, across the Pacific and in
European hubs; Continental is big in other European markets, Latin America
and the Northeast. That would suggest few layoffs, other than in redundant
layers of management.

   Robert Roach Jr., general vice president of the machinists' union, which
represents the flight attendants at Houston-based Continental, even
suggested that United's flight attendants might regain lost pension
benefits.

   Flight attendants at Elk Grove Village, Ill.-based United are represented
by a different union, the Association of Flight Attendants. Continental's
mechanics are represented by the Teamsters, while their counterparts at
United are represented by the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association.

   The Continental mechanics may be wary of letting themselves be represent=
ed
by AMFA, which led a disastrous 2005 strike at Northwest Airways Corp. But
federal law makes it risky for two unions to hold a showdown election. If
neither gets 50 percent support from all eligible voters, including
laid-off workers who might not bother to vote, both unions would be
decertified.

   Fearing that outcome, the Teamsters and the Communications Workers of
America agreed in September to share representation of customer-service
agents at the merged US Airways and America West.

   Neil Bernstein, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis and
an expert on the federal law that governs labor relations in the airline
industry, said he's never heard of an impasse between unions killing a
merger because one side usually gives up. That's essentially what happened
to the TWA flight attendants.

   "They folded," Bernstein said. "There were a lot of unhappy members. The
mergers go through, but the tensions remain between the two work forces.
It never goes smoothly."

   United's labor situation has been prickly under Chief Executive Glenn
Tilton, who was at the helm when workers were forced to endure layoffs and
two rounds of pay cuts in bankruptcy.

   Many employees also remain angry about the lucrative compensation receiv=
ed
by top management when the airline exited Chapter 11 last February. Tilton
was granted shares worth nearly $25 million at Wednesday's closing price,
plus stock options worth another $6 million.

   Some pilots have worn buttons reading, "United pilots have 40/40 vision,"
referring to pay raises given Tilton and Chief Operating Officer Pete
McDonald. The pilots union said last week it is forming a "strike
preparation committee" as a way of protesting the disparity between
management and employee pay.

   The airline's flight attendants union issued a statement expressing
"severe reservations" about a merger.

   "United Airlines is run by the same management that took hundreds of
millions of dollars in bonuses and stock for themselves paid with employee
sacrifices of pay, pensions and health care," said Greg Davidowitch, head
of the United branch of the Association of Flight Attendants. "There is no
trust for these so-called leaders and no confidence in where they might
lead us."

   United's labor situation "is problematic," said Darrell Jenkins, a
consultant to many airlines. "That's going to have to be handled."

   Continental has done a better job of weathering the industry slump that
began in early 2001 and was deepened by the terror attacks that year.
Still, the company cut thousands of jobs, and just last year it pushed
workers to take another $500 million in annual wage and benefit
concessions.

   While the industry is heavily unionized, there are pockets of nonunion
workers. They are at most risk in a merger because a lack of
representation, said James C. Little, international president of the
Transport Workers Union.

   In a novel organizing campaign in October, Little's union tried to
convince Continental's baggage handlers and cargo agents that joining TWU
would protect their jobs in a merger.

   Rumors of a deal with United were already swirling. But the company
downplayed the merger talk, and the workers voted narrowly to remain
nonunion.

   Little said the result might have been different if the election were he=
ld
this week.

   ___

   Associated Press Business Writer Dave Carpenter in Chicago contributed to
this report. --------------------------------------------------------------=
--------
Copyright 2006 AP

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