greg20
KITT
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2002
- Posts
- 81
From Reuters, but a decent read regardless:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20030212/bs_nm/airlines_delta_pilots_dc_1
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Delta Air Lines' (NYSE
AL - news) Chief Financial Officer Michelle Burns said the airline will approach its pilots on Wednesday with a request to open talks on their current contract, as Delta works to offset weak revenue by cutting costs.
"We will today notify pilots that we will be coming to them to discuss out contract, in the light of the environment in which we find ourselves," Burns said in a presentation at the Deutsche Bank 2003 Transportation Conference.
Atlanta-based Delta has already cut about $320 million a year through headcount reductions, and trimmed a total of more than $900 million a year by adding in process and efficiency improvements, Burns said.
As travel demand and airfares continue to sag, workers have increasingly been asked to sacrifice wages and benefits to lighten airlines' cost loads. Employees are expected to account for about half the total cost cuts at both AMR Corp.'s (NYSE:AMR - news) American Airlines and US Airways Group, (OTC BB:UAWGQ.OB - news) while employees at UAL Corp.'s (NYSE:UAL - news) United Airlines have taken $70 million per month in temporary wage cuts.
Delta's pilots, whose current contract runs until May 2005, are not required to open discussions over cost-cutting with the airline, Burns said. Pilots are the only major unionized group at Delta
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20030212/bs_nm/airlines_delta_pilots_dc_1
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Delta Air Lines' (NYSE
"We will today notify pilots that we will be coming to them to discuss out contract, in the light of the environment in which we find ourselves," Burns said in a presentation at the Deutsche Bank 2003 Transportation Conference.
Atlanta-based Delta has already cut about $320 million a year through headcount reductions, and trimmed a total of more than $900 million a year by adding in process and efficiency improvements, Burns said.
As travel demand and airfares continue to sag, workers have increasingly been asked to sacrifice wages and benefits to lighten airlines' cost loads. Employees are expected to account for about half the total cost cuts at both AMR Corp.'s (NYSE:AMR - news) American Airlines and US Airways Group, (OTC BB:UAWGQ.OB - news) while employees at UAL Corp.'s (NYSE:UAL - news) United Airlines have taken $70 million per month in temporary wage cuts.
Delta's pilots, whose current contract runs until May 2005, are not required to open discussions over cost-cutting with the airline, Burns said. Pilots are the only major unionized group at Delta