Truckdriver
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AMR Corp. quantifies payouts that angered unions
Fri Apr 21, 2006 4:36 PM ET
NEW YORK, April 21 (Reuters) - Three American Airlines executives reaped payouts of over $1.5 million each from a stock-based incentive plan which angered the top U.S. carrier's unions earlier this year, according to a regulatory filing on Friday.
The existence of the payouts had previously been disclosed but the effect on top executives' pay checks had never been quantified. The incentive plan outraged unions who had agreed to $1.8 billion in pay cuts in 2003 to avert a threatened bankrutpcy filing.
American, a unit of AMR Corp (AMR.N: Quote, Profile, Research), agreed earlier this month to change the payouts from all-cash to 80 percent stock to ease labor concerns. The unions have filed a grievance over the issue with an arbitrator who has yet to rule.
AMR officials could not immediately be reached for comment. The airline has said the payouts could total some $70 million.
The airline's executive vice president of marketing, Daniel Garton, received a payout worth $1.9 million under the plan, which was bolstered by the performance of AMR's shares, which more than doubled last year.
That boosted Garton's total compensation to $2.65 million.
Gary Kennedy, the airline's chief compliance officer, and Robert Reding, its senior vice president of technical operations, received $1.55 million each under the plan.
AMR's Chief Executive Gerard Arpey did not participate in the incentive plan. His 2005 compensation totaled $949,830, including $327,960 in restricted stock awards, up from $821,098 in 2004, according to the filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
While Arpey's salary was moderate compared with some of the other executives at AMR, it still dwarfed the 2005 pay of David Neeleman, founder and chief executive of JetBlue Airways Corp. (JBLU.O: Quote, Profile, Research).
According to another SEC filing on Friday, Neeleman was paid $200,000 in salary and received zero bonus in 2005, a year in which the discount carrier posted its first annual loss in several years.
I would feel alot more comfortable working for Neeleman than any of the other crooks running a US airline. And for all of those people who think Virgin is going to run jetBlue out of business, the only thing Sir Richard Branson is going to do is give Fred Reid and Don Carty another chance to run a good company into the ground and steal millions of dollars in the process. A company that is run by a guy like Neeleman will always succeed. jetBlue will be around longer than anyone can imagine and it will become bigger than ever believed if it has a guy like Neeleman at the helm.
Fri Apr 21, 2006 4:36 PM ET
NEW YORK, April 21 (Reuters) - Three American Airlines executives reaped payouts of over $1.5 million each from a stock-based incentive plan which angered the top U.S. carrier's unions earlier this year, according to a regulatory filing on Friday.
The existence of the payouts had previously been disclosed but the effect on top executives' pay checks had never been quantified. The incentive plan outraged unions who had agreed to $1.8 billion in pay cuts in 2003 to avert a threatened bankrutpcy filing.
American, a unit of AMR Corp (AMR.N: Quote, Profile, Research), agreed earlier this month to change the payouts from all-cash to 80 percent stock to ease labor concerns. The unions have filed a grievance over the issue with an arbitrator who has yet to rule.
AMR officials could not immediately be reached for comment. The airline has said the payouts could total some $70 million.
The airline's executive vice president of marketing, Daniel Garton, received a payout worth $1.9 million under the plan, which was bolstered by the performance of AMR's shares, which more than doubled last year.
That boosted Garton's total compensation to $2.65 million.
Gary Kennedy, the airline's chief compliance officer, and Robert Reding, its senior vice president of technical operations, received $1.55 million each under the plan.
AMR's Chief Executive Gerard Arpey did not participate in the incentive plan. His 2005 compensation totaled $949,830, including $327,960 in restricted stock awards, up from $821,098 in 2004, according to the filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
While Arpey's salary was moderate compared with some of the other executives at AMR, it still dwarfed the 2005 pay of David Neeleman, founder and chief executive of JetBlue Airways Corp. (JBLU.O: Quote, Profile, Research).
According to another SEC filing on Friday, Neeleman was paid $200,000 in salary and received zero bonus in 2005, a year in which the discount carrier posted its first annual loss in several years.
I would feel alot more comfortable working for Neeleman than any of the other crooks running a US airline. And for all of those people who think Virgin is going to run jetBlue out of business, the only thing Sir Richard Branson is going to do is give Fred Reid and Don Carty another chance to run a good company into the ground and steal millions of dollars in the process. A company that is run by a guy like Neeleman will always succeed. jetBlue will be around longer than anyone can imagine and it will become bigger than ever believed if it has a guy like Neeleman at the helm.