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United Machinists Reject Pay Cut
57 Percent Of Key Faction Says No To Wage Concessions
UPDATED: 10:38 a.m. MST November 28, 2002
A key faction of the United Airlines machinists
union rejected wage concessions that were part of the company's
effort to stay out of bankruptcy.
United mechanics rejected the proposal that was to contribute
$1.5 billion in cost reductions to the airline. In separate votes
Wednesday night, two other factions of the union approved the
proposal.
But the vote by the 13,000 mechanics and related employees could
jeopardize United's restructuring plan. United hopes to slash $5.2
billion in labor costs over 5 1/2 years -- the linchpin of its $14.1
billion financial recovery package.
"Each employee measured the costs and benefits of participating
in United's recovery," said Scotty Ford, president of the
mechanics' unit of the International Association of Machinists and
Aerospace Workers. "In the end, some thought the risk was worth
taking, and others felt they had sacrificed enough."
United is the largest carrier at Denver International Airport,
serving about 70 percent of passengers. It operates 1,800 flights a day nationwide.
United chairman, president and CEO Glenn Tilton issued a
statement on the company's Web site early Thursday saying the company remains committed to winning labor cost savings that will enable it to secure federally
backed loans.
"Clearly, we're disappointed that our mechanic and related
employees ... did not approve the tentative agreement with
United," he said.
Nearly 80 percent of the public contact employees, which
includes customer service, reservation agents and other various
airport workers approved the wage give-backs. Sixty-three percent
of the ramp and stores, food service and security guards ratified
the agreement. Those two factions make up about 24,500 United
employees.
Of the 13,000 mechanics and related employees, 57 percent voted
against the measure.
The proposal called for pay reductions of 6 percent to 7
percent.
United is seeking a loan guarantee from the federal Air
Transportation Stabilization Board, which is expected to rule any
day on its application.
United has been losing money at the rate of $7 million a day
this fall and is thought to be on a pace to run out of cash early
next year. It faces a Monday deadline for paying off $375 million
in debt, although that carries a grace period of 10 business days
which expires Dec. 16.
Tilton said the company plans to "immediately begin talks,"
with the machinists' union leadership to bring another proposal to
their members.
"We remain fully committed to the goals of the United Airlines Union Coalition in achieving labor cost savings that will enable us to secure federally backed loans," he said.
United's 8,800 pilots already have ratified $2.2 billion in
cutbacks, and its flight attendants are voting on a tentative
agreement for $412 million in wage reductions, with results to be
announced Saturday.
The union for Chicago-area flight dispatchers ratified an
agreement Wednesday for $2 million in cutbacks. Salaried and
management employees will contribute another $1.3 billion in labor
savings.
United mechanics rejected the proposal that was to contribute
$1.5 billion in cost reductions to the airline. In separate votes
Wednesday night, two other factions of the union approved the
proposal.
But the vote by the 13,000 mechanics and related employees could
jeopardize United's restructuring plan. United hopes to slash $5.2
billion in labor costs over 5 1/2 years -- the linchpin of its $14.1
billion financial recovery package.
"Each employee measured the costs and benefits of participating
in United's recovery," said Scotty Ford, president of the
mechanics' unit of the International Association of Machinists and
Aerospace Workers. "In the end, some thought the risk was worth
taking, and others felt they had sacrificed enough."
United is the largest carrier at Denver International Airport,
serving about 70 percent of passengers. It operates 1,800 flights a day nationwide.
United chairman, president and CEO Glenn Tilton issued a
statement on the company's Web site early Thursday saying the company remains committed to winning labor cost savings that will enable it to secure federally
backed loans.
"Clearly, we're disappointed that our mechanic and related
employees ... did not approve the tentative agreement with
United," he said.
Nearly 80 percent of the public contact employees, which
includes customer service, reservation agents and other various
airport workers approved the wage give-backs. Sixty-three percent
of the ramp and stores, food service and security guards ratified
the agreement. Those two factions make up about 24,500 United
employees.
Of the 13,000 mechanics and related employees, 57 percent voted
against the measure.
The proposal called for pay reductions of 6 percent to 7
percent.
United is seeking a loan guarantee from the federal Air
Transportation Stabilization Board, which is expected to rule any
day on its application.
United has been losing money at the rate of $7 million a day
this fall and is thought to be on a pace to run out of cash early
next year. It faces a Monday deadline for paying off $375 million
in debt, although that carries a grace period of 10 business days
which expires Dec. 16.
Tilton said the company plans to "immediately begin talks,"
with the machinists' union leadership to bring another proposal to
their members.
"We remain fully committed to the goals of the United Airlines Union Coalition in achieving labor cost savings that will enable us to secure federally backed loans," he said.
United's 8,800 pilots already have ratified $2.2 billion in
cutbacks, and its flight attendants are voting on a tentative
agreement for $412 million in wage reductions, with results to be
announced Saturday.
The union for Chicago-area flight dispatchers ratified an
agreement Wednesday for $2 million in cutbacks. Salaried and
management employees will contribute another $1.3 billion in labor
savings.
Copyright 2002 by TheDenverChannel.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.







