RJP
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UAL Pilots Agree to Scrap Pension!
Pilots agree to United scrapping pension plan -WSJ
Fri Dec 17, 2004 04:51 AM ET
NEW YORK, Dec 17 (Reuters) - Leaders of the United Airlines pilots' union have approved a tentative contract with the bankrupt No. 2 U.S. carrier and agreed not to fight UAL Corp.'s (UALAQ.OB: Quote, Profile, Research) bid to scrap the group's pension plan, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.
As part of the agreement, once it emerges from bankruptcy protection, United Airlines' parent UAL Corp. would issue $550 million in convertible notes to the union, Stephen Presser, the union's investment banker, told the newspaper.
The pilots could then sell the notes in the capital market to raise money that would make up some of the shortfall they would experience because of the termination of their defined-benefit pension plan, he added.
Negotiators for the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) reached the tentative contract deal earlier this week but did not disclose details at the time. Leaders of the union attended a meeting on Thursday to review the deal and approved it, the Journal reported.
The five-year agreement -- which would save UAL about $180 million to $190 million more a year -- will go to ALPA's membership for a vote early next month, the Journal said.
The pilots' concession over the pension plan could become a model for the industry, the paper added, quoting Presser as saying that "it could be replicated for other work groups."
The agreement only applies to active pilots, not those who are retired, according to the Journal.
© Reuters 2004
Fri Dec 17, 2004 04:51 AM ET
NEW YORK, Dec 17 (Reuters) - Leaders of the United Airlines pilots' union have approved a tentative contract with the bankrupt No. 2 U.S. carrier and agreed not to fight UAL Corp.'s (UALAQ.OB: Quote, Profile, Research) bid to scrap the group's pension plan, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.
As part of the agreement, once it emerges from bankruptcy protection, United Airlines' parent UAL Corp. would issue $550 million in convertible notes to the union, Stephen Presser, the union's investment banker, told the newspaper.
The pilots could then sell the notes in the capital market to raise money that would make up some of the shortfall they would experience because of the termination of their defined-benefit pension plan, he added.
Negotiators for the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) reached the tentative contract deal earlier this week but did not disclose details at the time. Leaders of the union attended a meeting on Thursday to review the deal and approved it, the Journal reported.
The five-year agreement -- which would save UAL about $180 million to $190 million more a year -- will go to ALPA's membership for a vote early next month, the Journal said.
The pilots' concession over the pension plan could become a model for the industry, the paper added, quoting Presser as saying that "it could be replicated for other work groups."
The agreement only applies to active pilots, not those who are retired, according to the Journal.
© Reuters 2004
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