SFGate: US Airways Pilots Fight Over Union

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Tuesday, March 18, 2008 (AP)
US Airways Pilots Fight Over Union
By CHRIS KAHN, AP Business Writer


   (03-18) 23:00 PDT PHOENIX (AP) --

   As a US Airways pilot for two decades, Richard Obermeyer endured years of
pay cuts, a terminated pension program and the possibility of losing
seniority after the carrier combined with America West Airlines.

   But he's never dealt with frustration like this.

   His union, the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), is tearing itself
apart. Many of his fellow pilots believe it has failed them, and emotions
are boiling over as an election approaches Thursday to replace it with
another group.

   Pilots say ALPA supporters have clashed with their rivals at the upstart
US Airline Pilots Association (USAPA). They've engaged in at least one
shoving match, shouted profanities at each other in airport terminals and
called each other to the parking lot to settle their arguments.

   Meanwhile, ALPA has kicked out union reps accused of supporting USAPA, a=
nd
pilots on the West Coast have asked management to negotiate a separate
contract just for them.

   "All of this is just pure frustration," Obermeyer said. "Frustration with
how the pilot's career has gone. Frustration with things that were
completely out of their control."

   Obermeyer, who is an ALPA communications chairman on the East Coast, saw
the frustration for himself last week when he attended an informal USAPA
meeting at a hotel in Philadelphia. He said the group's supporters pushed
him out of the room and tried to rip a notepad from his hands.

   "I've been doing work for the Air Line Pilots Association for 16 years,
and this is the first time anyone has ever touched me out of anger,"
Obermeyer said.

   ALPA representatives in Charlotte later sent an e-mail to pilots warning
of "thugs in the neighborhood." They said ALPA members have been accosted
at airports for not wearing the yellow USAPA lanyards. They also mentioned
that a USAPA supporter sent a picture of a Ku Klux Klan rally to another
pilot.

   On Tuesday, ALPA President John Prater sent a letter to US Airways Chief
Executive Doug Parker demanding that the carrier take action to prevent
any intimidation of pilots.

   Company officials told The Associated Press they're investigating whether
a US Airways pilot sent a picture of the KKK rally. "As we have
demonstrated in the past, US Airways has zero tolerance for workplace
harassment of any kind," company officials said in a statement.

   USAPA spokesman and US Airways Capt. Scott Theuer said his group hasn't
organized any hostility toward the incumbent union.

   "We have no knowledge of the alleged actions that took place, and we
certainly would not condone them," Theuer said.

   He added that his group estimates that 93 percent of US Airways pilots on
the East Coast want a new union.

   Analysts say the US Airways pilot dispute has become a prime example of
the pitfalls of industry consolidation. Delta Air Lines Inc. and Northwest
Airlines Corp. are waiting for their pilots to agree on seniority before
they move forward with any combination plans.

   Pilots at Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways Group Inc. were thrown together =
in
2005 when the company combined America West with the former,
Virginia-based US Airways. Their unions started working together on a
joint salary and benefits contract, but both sides started to squabble
over which pilots would get more seniority.

   Seniority is extremely important for pilots, determining which planes th=
ey
fly, what routes they take, and whether they work during the holidays.

   An independent arbitrator was called to decide the seniority list last
year, but the pilots from the former US Airways, who are known internally
as "East" pilots, disagreed with the ruling and are asking a Washington,
D.C., court to set it aside.

   East pilots later walked away from formal negotiations on a joint pilots'
contract and demanded immediate pay raises before they return. Management
refused.

   Meanwhile, some East pilots formed the USAPA to oust the existing union
and replace it as the collective-bargaining group. The federal National
Mediation Board called an election to decide the matter.

   On April 17, the board will tally the votes and determine which group has
collective bargaining rights for all 5,300 pilots in US Airways' system.

   While the election proceeds, pilots from the former America West hope th=
at
management will agree to work with them separately on a contract.

   "They're under a legal obligation to do so," said Tania Bziukiewicz, a US
Airways pilot and ALPA representative. "If USAPA were to win the election,
they're still required under the Railway Labor Act to negotiate the
contract" with the pilots from America West.

   But US Airways has refused to deal with only some of its pilots. The
carrier already has reached joint labor contracts with its flight
dispatchers, simulator engineers, flight crew training instructors, and
its passenger service and reservations agents.

   "We believe it to be in the best interest of US Airways and all of our
employees to focus on joint negotiations for single labor agreements," US
Airways officials said in a statement.

   "We are now one company."

   ___

   On the Net:

   US Airways: www.usairways.com

   Air Line Pilots Association: www.alpa.org

   US Airline Pilots Association: http://usairlinepilots.org/ -------------=
---------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2008 AP

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