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Wage slashing at US Airways

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Bluestreak

Fitty-Six F100's rock
Joined
Nov 26, 2001
Posts
375
From Forbes,a harbinger of things to come ?
******************************
Wage Slasher
Thursday January 30, 6:34 pm ET
By Mark Tatge
With help from a Chapter 11 filing, DAVE SIEGEL persuaded $336,000-a-year airline pilots to take huge pay cuts.
David N. Siegel, chief of US Airways Group, the nation's seventh-largest carrier, is leading a revolution that may change the airline industry forever--by challenging its most powerful union.
He'd be loath to say so. His main job, in the 11 months he has spent as chief executive, has been to turn around this seeming basket case, which suffered a 16% drop in business since Sept. 11, a Chapter 11 filing in August, delisting from the NYSE (shares trade over-the-counter for 22 cents), an estimated $1.2 billion loss last year on revenue of $6.6 billion and a fresh defeat in the Senate of a plan to extend payments to its pension fund by 23 years.

And yet the 41-year-old veteran of Continental Airlines, Avis Rent A Car and Northwest Airlines is upbeat. "I've never been more optimistic," he says. "It's a fresh start for the company."
Is it ever. Yes, Siegel has done the predictably correct things to right the carrier, due to emerge from bankruptcy in March. He has restructured $8 billion in on- and off-balance-sheet debt, handed pink slips to 3,700 workers, slashed the fleet from 417 to 279 large jets, increased the airline's load factor--the fraction of available seats paid for--2.1 percentage points to 71% and dropped the cost per available seat mile to 11 cents from 12.2 cents the year before. But he also succeeded where nearly everyone else--at US Airways (OTC BB:UAWGQ.OB - News) or at any other carrier--has failed before: in persuading surviving employees to take $1 billion a year in wage and benefit cuts. (Siegel himself took a 20% pay cut and passed on a $750,000 bonus.) More specifically, he has cracked a vertebra in the strong back of the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), which represents 67,000 pilots nationwide. With huge reluctance Siegel's 4,059 pilots have accepted average wage cuts of 32% to 40%.
If it can happen at US Airways, can bankrupt UAL (NYSE:UAL - News) (United) and financially lame AMR (NYSE:AMR - News) (American) be far behind? Siegel is unapologetic. "We either have a cost structure where we make money or we go away," he says. As a result of those concessions and across-the-board cutbacks, this optimistic boss believes US Airways will book a profit in 2004.
Siegel seems to have won over his people through amiability, straight shooting and steeliness--a bit like his Hollywood hero, Arnold Schwarzenegger. He constantly talks to people. Not only across the negotiating table but at cookouts, in hallways and break rooms. He flies in the cockpit jump seat discussing work rules and pay issues with pilots. "Dave is not one of these CEOs who leaves by the side door to avoid employees," says David Bronner, chief executive of the Retirement Systems of Alabama, the pension fund providing $500 million in interim financing. Patricia Friend, international president of the Association of Flight Attendants, says Siegel is "doing the best he can with a bad situation."
Better than that, he has exploited the downturn to extract unprecedented concessions, especially from pilots. Within a month of taking over last March, Siegel was able to persuade union leaders that, on its then-current course, the airline would run through $1 billion in cash within 12 months and probably find no lender willing to provide more. "The unions were shocked," says John Luth, a financial adviser to the airline. "No one had put it in these terms before."
With candor came toughness. In June, Siegel and Senior Vice President Jerrold A. Glass negotiated a deal with the pilots dubbed "jets for jobs." Pilots laid off from mainline jets would be offered half the new openings for pilots on regional jets (50 seats), now flown by affiliates under US Airways' colors. They will be hired first for all new pilot jobs at US Airways' new regional affiliate. Made by Bombardier and Embraer, these little jets are quieter and more fuel-thrifty than US Airways' aging turboprops. They will make it economical for the airline to continue flying to places like Omaha, Madison, Wis. and Mobile, Ala.
Pilots are not thrilled: A first-year regional-jet captain gets $51,000 for a work schedule that has him in the cockpit for 1,020 hours a year. That compares with $193,000 for a 12-year captain flying an Airbus A330 (who was making up to $336,000 six months ago). A pilot who is laid off and rehired at a regional starts at the bottom.
The pay-cutting started in July when US Airways was awaiting word on its $1 billion federal loan guarantee application. First officers on A330 jets were cut from $229,000 to $143,000; on Boeing 737s, from $152,000 to $111,000. Three days before filing for Chapter 11 on Aug. 11, 2002, grumbling pilots agreed to a six-and-a-half-year virtual freeze on wages, save cost-of-living allowance. Two days after United filed for bankruptcy on Dec. 11, 2002, US Airways pilots okayed a second round of wage givebacks, averaging 8%. "These were done under threat of liquidation," says Roy Freundlich, spokesman for the US Airways unit of ALPA.
"Everyone has had to make sacrifices, and the pain has been enormous," says Siegel. More torment is to come. Yet to be resolved is $3.1 billion in pension liabilities affecting 7,000-plus employed, furloughed or retired pilots. Average retired pilots expect 50% of annual pay, or up to $70,000. But Siegel says unless he's permitted to pay those obligations over 30 years, he will foist a $500 million obligation on the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corp. Most US Airways pilots could get as little as $28,000 annually.
Workers at United, American and other lines are now competing against a trimmed-down US Airways. How long can they prop up the wage scale?
 
I had done a little research and then ran out of steam to respond to a previous thread, but let's look at executive compensation (all numbers gleaned from last year's reports):

US Airways:

Wolf -
$1.9 Million salary
2.3 million shares of stock (in options)

Siegel -
$750K salary, $750K signing bonus, $750K 6 month bonus and a $750K performance bonus (that he passed up)
1.5 million shares stock options

USAirways mgmt-
took a 15% pay cut across the board yielding $30 Million - if you backplay these numbers, US Airways management will be paid $200 Million dollars compensation over the same time period as the pilot giveback contract.

------------------------------

United: (this is good)

Creighton (ex CEO) -
(took no compensation other than the $11K per week he was paid as CEO for term)

Goodwin (ex CEO) -
$5.7 Million to buy out his contract

Tilton (new CEO) -
$900K salary
$3 million signing bonus
$4.5 million trust (to buyout his prior retirement from Chevron)
1.2 Million shares of United stock
(And he will get $3.6 million from Chevron this year - man is he going to have one he11 of a tax return!)

United mgmt -
Officers took an 11% pay cut yielding $60 million in the next 5 years - for 11% to represent 60M, this means that executives would have been paid $545 million over the next 5 years!

-----------------------

AA:

Carty-
$1.5 million salary
2.5 million shares (options immediately exercisable)
(that was this years compensation)

He also has 3.5 million exercisable shares and 3.5 million non-exercisable shares from previous compensation.

Arpey-
$750K salary
1.0 million shares (options immediately exercisable)
0.5 million shares (non-exercisable)

Garton-
$750K salary
750K shares (options exercisable)
500K shares (non-exercisable)

-------------------------

DAL:

Mullin-
$2.2 million salary
2.1 million shares

Reid-
$1.4 million salary
500K shares

Burns-
$700K salary
200K shares

Colman-
$900K salary
400K shares

Escarr-
$1.1 million salary
400K shares

----------------------------------

And just for fun, Mesa:

Ornstein-
$600K salary
1.5 million exerciseable share options
1.1 million non-ex shares

Lotz-
$500K salary
1.7 million shares exerciseable
200K shares non-ex


My dad always said if there was one bad side to capitalism is the old saying "the rich get richer and the poor get poorer".
 
The quote:
Better than that, he has exploited the downturn to extract unprecedented concessions, especially from pilots. Within a month of taking over last March, Siegel was able to persuade union leaders that, on its then-current course, the airline would run through $1 billion in cash within 12 months and probably find no lender willing to provide more. "The unions were shocked," says John Luth, a financial adviser to the airline. "No one had put it in these terms before."
This really casts unions in a bad light.

How clear did it need to be? The financial statements said it all. Its adding and subtracting.

You mean money DOESN'T grow on trees?
 
forbes makes me sick

"He flies in the cockpit jump seat discussing work rules and pay issues with pilots"

Does he really? I'm wondering what qualifies him to be allowed by FAA regs to be admitted to the flight deck. I can't think of anything more unsafe and distracting to the safety of flight than having your CEO on your flight deck discussing work rules and pay.....

336K a year for pilots?

Maybe at one time a select few, a very small percentage at the top of the senority list, were at that figure...which I bet included a dollar amount for benefits. Articles like this give the general public the idea that we all make this kind of money. Another article says we only work 36 hours a month. No wonder everyone hates us.....
 
Pilots are not thrilled: A first-year regional-jet captain gets $51,000 for a work schedule that has him in the cockpit for 1,020 hours a year



I thought there was a 1000 hr/ yr limit by reg.? Or are we now including all that time we spend working for per-diem?
 
100LL... Again! said:
The D.O. can authorize anyone to ride in the jumpseat.

Sure he can....Does'nt mean it's legal...
 
Where's Duane E. Woerth(less?) response to this dung heap of short-sighted, poorly researched, A.D.D. journalism? I'm starting figure out ALPA's plan to arm pilots. I'll call it the "Guns for Pilots" program, or G4P for short. The Plan is simply to whittle away the country's non-furloughed ALPA membership to numbers that will make arming pilots financially feasible. It's like a 5-to-1 ratio. For every 5 millionaire pilots that are furloughed, the ALPA and government resources will afford for 1 active pilot to carry a fire arm.

Tailwinds...
 

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