|
WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Airlines
Flight attendants union granted major concessions to avoid
US Airways strike
By Jerry White
1 April 2000
Use
this version to print
Details are beginning to emerge about the concessions the Association
of Flight Attendants (AFA) gave to US Airways in order to reach
a tentative agreement last Saturday, March 25 and avert a strike
by 10,000 union members against the nation's sixth largest airline.
Before the deal was reached US Airways management had threatened
to shut down its entire operations rather than face random strikes
on the carrier's busiest routes. The deal was reached three hours
after the expiration of a midnight deadline following round-the-clock
talks between AFA President Lynn Lenosky and company President
Rakesh Gangwol, under the auspices of a federal mediator.
Announcing the deal Lenosky said the contract is a five-year
agreement flight attendants can be proud of. She emphasized
the 5 percent signing bonus and 11 percent raise over the life
of the contract, the first pay increase for flight attendants
since 1996. Top AFL-CIO officials, who reportedly participated
in the last-minute efforts to avert a strike, echoed Lenosky's
statements, with AFL-CIO President John Sweeney commending the
solidarity of the flight attendants for standing
up to a profitable company.
What details have emerged, however, paint a very different
picture. In a contract summary posted on the AFA's web site the
union's negotiating committee lists various concessions on work
rules, scheduling, vacation benefits and sick leave that will
enable management to boost productivity and further cut costs.
For example, the AFA agreed to reduce accrued sick leave to
5 hours a month from 5 1/4 hours. The union also agreed to reduce
accruals for vacation by one day a year for flight attendants
with 1 to 29 years seniority. Attendants would only regain the
lost days in their thirtieth year of service.
In addition, the union agreed to the company's demands that
reserve flight attendantsgenerally lower seniority workers
who are on callwork beyond the limit of 30 hours
in a seven-day period. This is particularly onerous because working
hours are only counted from when the door on the plane closes
to when it opens again at the other end of the trip. All the time
spent getting the plane ready, seating the passengers and then
helping people off doesn't count. As one US Airways attendant
said, For every 20 hours' pay you get, you spend 80 hours
away from home. The new contract provisions will only make
matters much worse.
In addition, the union agreed to a huge cut in the maximum
length of disability coverage for injured workers. In the past
attendants could receive a maximum disability payment of $2,350
a month for up to seven years. The new tentative agreement reduces
the maximum coverage to only two years.
While details are sketchy, particularly because the summary
by the negotiating committee only lists their highlights,
it is clear that the union gave up major concessions. The union
officials all but acknowledge this in the letter to flight attendants
preceding the summary.
In the final hours, we had to make some tough decisions.
We reduced or gave up some items in which we have traditionally
enjoyed significant advantages over all of the other flight attendants
in the industry. We assure you, though, that we kept those changes
to a minimum compared to the company's demands.
With the assistance of the AFA and other unions at the airlines,
over the past five years US Airways has returned to profitability
after facing near bankruptcy in the early 1990s. While flight
attendants have forgone pay raises and other benefits, US Airways'
top executives have received increases and bonuses up to 500 percent.
CEO Stephen Wolf, a veteran cost-cutter originally from Northwest
and United Airlines, made $35 million in 1998, most of it in stock
awards and options.
US Airways management, concerned that gloating might provoke
rank-and-file opposition, has said little about what it achieved.
In a statement by US Airways after the deal was reached, management
praised the AFA leadership for avoiding an interruption in service
and reaching an agreement that allowed the company to compete
in the marketplace.
The AFA's Master Executive Council is currently discussing
the tentative agreement and will vote on whether to recommend
it to the membership. Rank-and-file flight attendants will vote
on the deal over the next month.
See Also:
US Airways and union reach
agreement
Flight attendants speak on issues
[27 March 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |