lowecur
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2003
- Posts
- 2,317
Lets see, that's $182M in annual FA costs times 31% increase. Back pay owed would be around $112M for 2 years. That's $56M per year added to the payroll going forward. Can't wait to see how the airline does in the 4th Q. Add that to incentives including productivity pay, red-eye pay, training pay for new hires and an increase in per-diem pay to match pilots. The attendants will also get holiday pay and retiree health insurance benefits at age 55 for the first time. The deal also includes limits on the time that attendants will work on the ground between flights.
If all this is true, you guys better hurry up and order the E-series, cause it sounds like ol Herb & Colleen gave away the ship.
July 1, 2004
UNION TOUTS TENTATIVE CONTRACT WITH SOUTHWEST AIRLINES
DALLAS - A tentative labor agreement would give flight attendants at Southwest Airlines an average 31 percent pay raise and make them the industry leaders in pay and work rules, according to the union that negotiated the deal.
The Transport Workers Union local 556 said Thursday that the agreement would increase pay scales and shorten the time it takes a Southwest flight attendant to reach top pay from 17 years to 14 years.
The six-year agreement also includes stock options - a first for the flight attendants but recently given to other union workers at Southwest. The contract would be retroactive to June 1, 2002, if it is ratified by Southwest's 7,400 flight attendants.
Voting by phone and computer will occur from July 16 to July 30 with results expected on the final day of voting, according to the union.
Thom McDaniel, president of Local 556, said the agreement wouldn't jeopardize Southwest's ability to compete against other airlines that have higher costs.
The Transport Workers Union and the Dallas-based airline announced the tentative agreement last week but did not disclose its terms until Thursday. The highlights of the deal were posted on the union's Web site.
The deal appeared to end a two-year stalemate at the negotiating table. A federal mediator was brought in to help bring the settle the dispute. Company officials said they hoped the union would ratify the deal.
The agreement would lift pay scales from 22 percent to 126 percent, with the average flight attendant seeing a 31 percent increase over the term of the deal, which runs through May 2008.
Union officials said recently that starting pay for Southwest flight attendants is about $14,000 and median pay is $24,600, which they said lagged counterparts at other carriers.
Flight attendants would also get incentives including productivity pay, red-eye pay, training pay for new hires and an increase in per-diem pay to match pilots.
The attendants will also get holiday pay and retiree health insurance benefits at age 55 for the first time. The deal also includes limits on the time that attendants will work on the ground between flights.
Analysts have raised concern about rising labor costs at Southwest, where 85 percent of the work force is unionized. The airline's cost for wages and salaries jumped 14 percent in the first three months of this year compared to a year earlier. In May, Southwest offered early-retirement incentives to nearly all its 34,000 employees in a bid to cut costs.
Shares of Southwest fell 28 cents or 1.7 percent, to $16.49, in afternoon
If all this is true, you guys better hurry up and order the E-series, cause it sounds like ol Herb & Colleen gave away the ship.


July 1, 2004
UNION TOUTS TENTATIVE CONTRACT WITH SOUTHWEST AIRLINES
DALLAS - A tentative labor agreement would give flight attendants at Southwest Airlines an average 31 percent pay raise and make them the industry leaders in pay and work rules, according to the union that negotiated the deal.
The Transport Workers Union local 556 said Thursday that the agreement would increase pay scales and shorten the time it takes a Southwest flight attendant to reach top pay from 17 years to 14 years.
The six-year agreement also includes stock options - a first for the flight attendants but recently given to other union workers at Southwest. The contract would be retroactive to June 1, 2002, if it is ratified by Southwest's 7,400 flight attendants.
Voting by phone and computer will occur from July 16 to July 30 with results expected on the final day of voting, according to the union.
Thom McDaniel, president of Local 556, said the agreement wouldn't jeopardize Southwest's ability to compete against other airlines that have higher costs.
The Transport Workers Union and the Dallas-based airline announced the tentative agreement last week but did not disclose its terms until Thursday. The highlights of the deal were posted on the union's Web site.
The deal appeared to end a two-year stalemate at the negotiating table. A federal mediator was brought in to help bring the settle the dispute. Company officials said they hoped the union would ratify the deal.
The agreement would lift pay scales from 22 percent to 126 percent, with the average flight attendant seeing a 31 percent increase over the term of the deal, which runs through May 2008.
Union officials said recently that starting pay for Southwest flight attendants is about $14,000 and median pay is $24,600, which they said lagged counterparts at other carriers.
Flight attendants would also get incentives including productivity pay, red-eye pay, training pay for new hires and an increase in per-diem pay to match pilots.
The attendants will also get holiday pay and retiree health insurance benefits at age 55 for the first time. The deal also includes limits on the time that attendants will work on the ground between flights.
Analysts have raised concern about rising labor costs at Southwest, where 85 percent of the work force is unionized. The airline's cost for wages and salaries jumped 14 percent in the first three months of this year compared to a year earlier. In May, Southwest offered early-retirement incentives to nearly all its 34,000 employees in a bid to cut costs.
Shares of Southwest fell 28 cents or 1.7 percent, to $16.49, in afternoon
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