SFGate: Report: Talks between United, US Airways stalling

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Wednesday, May 28, 2008 (AP)
Report: Talks between United, US Airways stalling



   (05-28) 04:22 PDT New York (AP) --
   Consolidation talks between United Airlines and US Airways appear to have
fallen apart, The New York Times reported late Tuesday, citing unnamed
people with direct knowledge of the discussions.
   The board of United parent UAL Corp., and its chief executive Glenn F.
Tilton, raised questions about the arrangement in the past few days,
according to three people the Times said had been briefed on the decision
making. One person said senior executives at both airlines, as well as
external bankers and lawyers working toward a deal, have put it on
"permanent hold."
   The Times said the people spoke on condition of anonymity because the
talks were private.
   United spokeswoman Jean Medina declined to comment to The Associated
Press. "We don't comment on rumors or speculation," she said.
   US Airways spokesman Morgan Durrant also declined to comment.
   A key sticking point appeared to be labor complications, the Times
reported. Sorting out issues such as union representation and seniority
could have taken years, delaying any cost savings from a deal. US Airways
Group Inc. has still not reached agreements with all of its unions
following its 2005 combination with America West Airlines.
   United and US Airways first agreed to team up eight years ago, but United
called off the planned $4.3 billion acquisition in July 2001 after the
Justice Department said it would sue to block it.
   More recently, industry analysts have predicted a trend toward bigger but
more efficient airlines as fuel prices have skyrocketed and carriers
struggle to survive.
   Chicago-based United and Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways have been in
preliminary talks for months, but the pace picked up last month after
Delta Air Lines Inc.'s acquisition of Northwest Airlines Corp. was
announced and Continental Airlines Inc. said it decided not to pursue a
merger with United.
   A combined United-US Airways would jockey with the newly proposed
Delta-Northwest for bragging rights as the nation's largest carrier,
dropping AMR Corp.'s American Airlines from first to third.
   Combined, United and US Airways have about 91,000 employees, more than 8=
00
airplanes and annual revenues of $31.8 billion. ---------------------------=
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Copyright 2008 AP

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