General Lee
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2002
- Posts
- 20,442
UPDATE - Delta pilots union files grievance over furloughs
Wednesday July 9, 4:10 pm ET
By Meredith Grossman Dubner
(Adds no comment from company, other details)
CHICAGO, July 9 (Reuters) - The pilots union at Delta Air Lines (NYSE
AL - News) has filed a grievance with the carrier for using a "force majeure" clause in its labor contract to furlough 250 workers, a union spokesman said on Wednesday.
Mike Pinho, spokesman for Delta's unit of the Air Line Pilots Association (News - Websites), said the grievance with the No. 3 U.S. airline was filed on June 26 after Delta cited the Iraq war as justification for the pilot furloughs.
Delta spokeswoman Peggy Estes said she could not comment on the grievance.
Airline labor agreements contain force majeure clauses that give carriers the flexibility to lay off workers without adhering to strict seniority provisions during unexpected crises.
U.S. airlines used the war with Iraq and a subsequent decline in air travel demand as legal justification for thousands of layoffs, setting off a number of fights with unions.
The Delta pilots were furloughed April 1, May 1 and June 1, Pinho said.
"Now that the war in Iraq has been declared over by the president of the United States, ALPA feels that the circumstances under which Delta declared force majeure are no longer there," Pinho said.
Pinho said the union has met with the Atlanta-based company to review its grievance, and Delta has 60 days to respond.
Delta and leaders of its pilots union last week opened early talks on contract changes. Delta has said it needs pay cuts from pilots, who are paid the highest salaries among their peers, to remain competitive with rivals who have reduced their pilots' pay by nearly one-third.
Delta's pilots are the only group of unionized workers at the airline.
Delta in April proposed reducing pilots' hourly pay by 22 percent and canceling 4.5 percent raises this year and next.
The union has said it will seek a return on any potential investment it decides.
Good. Let's hope this starts to bring back some of the furloughs soon. Everyone can see that the War Emergency is over and the loads have filled up. I hope the arbitrator sees that too.
Bye Bye--General Lee

Wednesday July 9, 4:10 pm ET
By Meredith Grossman Dubner
(Adds no comment from company, other details)
CHICAGO, July 9 (Reuters) - The pilots union at Delta Air Lines (NYSE
Mike Pinho, spokesman for Delta's unit of the Air Line Pilots Association (News - Websites), said the grievance with the No. 3 U.S. airline was filed on June 26 after Delta cited the Iraq war as justification for the pilot furloughs.
Delta spokeswoman Peggy Estes said she could not comment on the grievance.
Airline labor agreements contain force majeure clauses that give carriers the flexibility to lay off workers without adhering to strict seniority provisions during unexpected crises.
U.S. airlines used the war with Iraq and a subsequent decline in air travel demand as legal justification for thousands of layoffs, setting off a number of fights with unions.
The Delta pilots were furloughed April 1, May 1 and June 1, Pinho said.
"Now that the war in Iraq has been declared over by the president of the United States, ALPA feels that the circumstances under which Delta declared force majeure are no longer there," Pinho said.
Pinho said the union has met with the Atlanta-based company to review its grievance, and Delta has 60 days to respond.
Delta and leaders of its pilots union last week opened early talks on contract changes. Delta has said it needs pay cuts from pilots, who are paid the highest salaries among their peers, to remain competitive with rivals who have reduced their pilots' pay by nearly one-third.
Delta's pilots are the only group of unionized workers at the airline.
Delta in April proposed reducing pilots' hourly pay by 22 percent and canceling 4.5 percent raises this year and next.
The union has said it will seek a return on any potential investment it decides.
Good. Let's hope this starts to bring back some of the furloughs soon. Everyone can see that the War Emergency is over and the loads have filled up. I hope the arbitrator sees that too.
Bye Bye--General Lee