lowecur
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2003
- Posts
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I still have my doubts this will go through. Sen. Fitzgerald wants a Treasury investigation, but none has been ordered at this point. If it does go through, you can bet there will be one.
United Airlines renews, reduces loan-guarantee bid
Tue Jun 22, 2004 08:27 PM ET
By John Crawley and Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON, June 22 (Reuters) - Bankrupt United Airlines filed a scaled-back federal loan guarantee application on Tuesday, less than a week after a government board rejected a request for $1.6 billion in taxpayer financial backing.
An industry source with knowledge of United's new application said the figure was slightly over $1 billion.
United, a unit of UAL Corp., confirmed that it resubmitted its application with the Air Transportation Stabilization Board but declined to disclose an amount.
Separately, a Republican senator asked the Treasury Department to investigate whether a senior Treasury official has been inappropriately pressured, as a member of the board overseeing the loan guarantee program, to reverse his opposition to granting the No. 2 airline credit assistance.
United says it needs the guarantee -- under a program established after the 2001 hijack attacks to help struggling airlines -- to secure private loans needed to pay for its bankruptcy emergence later this year.
United initially applied for a $1.8 billion guarantee but that was rejected in 2002, prompting a bankruptcy filing.
The carrier was invited to reapply a third time even though two members of the three-member stabilization board said the airline's prospects of getting private financing had improved to the point a guarantee was not needed.
The new application came as Republican Sen. Peter Fitzgerald of Illinois, who opposes a United loan, sought a Treasury Department investigation into the board's handling of the last application.
Fitzgerald, a Republican and chairman of the Governmental Affairs subcommittee on financial management, said he is troubled that the Treasury Department's representative on the board, Undersecretary Brian Roseboro, cleared a path for United to file a new application after voting against the carrier.
The action was "at best perplexing and at worst suspect," Fitzgerald said in a letter to Dennis Schindel, acting inspector general of the Treasury Department.
He suggested in an interview with Reuters that U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Dennis Hastert, a fellow Illinois Republican, was a source of pressure on the Treasury Department.
Hastert is a supporter of a guarantee for United, based in Elk Grove, Illinois.
Roseboro and Federal Reserve Board Governor Edward Gramlich voted to reject United's guarantee request, but Roseboro said at the time he was open to reconsideration.
Hastert had contacted Snow after the decision.
"It may be something just innocuous, but there also could be more in the way of intimidation," Fitzgerald told Reuters in reference to Hastert's contact.
A spokesman for Hastert, John Feehery, said the speaker has not acted inappropriately. "There's not any undue political pressure. The speaker simply asked that they (the guarantee board) take a look at the entire loan application, and that's what they agreed to do," Feehery said.
The Treasury Department said there are no plans to remove Roseboro from the board and a spokesman turned aside suggestions Snow was pressured.
A spokesman for Treasury's Schindel said there has been no decision on whether to launch a preliminary inquiry.
United Airlines renews, reduces loan-guarantee bid
Tue Jun 22, 2004 08:27 PM ET
By John Crawley and Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON, June 22 (Reuters) - Bankrupt United Airlines filed a scaled-back federal loan guarantee application on Tuesday, less than a week after a government board rejected a request for $1.6 billion in taxpayer financial backing.
An industry source with knowledge of United's new application said the figure was slightly over $1 billion.
United, a unit of UAL Corp., confirmed that it resubmitted its application with the Air Transportation Stabilization Board but declined to disclose an amount.
Separately, a Republican senator asked the Treasury Department to investigate whether a senior Treasury official has been inappropriately pressured, as a member of the board overseeing the loan guarantee program, to reverse his opposition to granting the No. 2 airline credit assistance.
United says it needs the guarantee -- under a program established after the 2001 hijack attacks to help struggling airlines -- to secure private loans needed to pay for its bankruptcy emergence later this year.
United initially applied for a $1.8 billion guarantee but that was rejected in 2002, prompting a bankruptcy filing.
The carrier was invited to reapply a third time even though two members of the three-member stabilization board said the airline's prospects of getting private financing had improved to the point a guarantee was not needed.
The new application came as Republican Sen. Peter Fitzgerald of Illinois, who opposes a United loan, sought a Treasury Department investigation into the board's handling of the last application.
Fitzgerald, a Republican and chairman of the Governmental Affairs subcommittee on financial management, said he is troubled that the Treasury Department's representative on the board, Undersecretary Brian Roseboro, cleared a path for United to file a new application after voting against the carrier.
The action was "at best perplexing and at worst suspect," Fitzgerald said in a letter to Dennis Schindel, acting inspector general of the Treasury Department.
He suggested in an interview with Reuters that U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Dennis Hastert, a fellow Illinois Republican, was a source of pressure on the Treasury Department.
Hastert is a supporter of a guarantee for United, based in Elk Grove, Illinois.
Roseboro and Federal Reserve Board Governor Edward Gramlich voted to reject United's guarantee request, but Roseboro said at the time he was open to reconsideration.
Hastert had contacted Snow after the decision.
"It may be something just innocuous, but there also could be more in the way of intimidation," Fitzgerald told Reuters in reference to Hastert's contact.
A spokesman for Hastert, John Feehery, said the speaker has not acted inappropriately. "There's not any undue political pressure. The speaker simply asked that they (the guarantee board) take a look at the entire loan application, and that's what they agreed to do," Feehery said.
The Treasury Department said there are no plans to remove Roseboro from the board and a spokesman turned aside suggestions Snow was pressured.
A spokesman for Treasury's Schindel said there has been no decision on whether to launch a preliminary inquiry.