|
WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Airlines
Northwest Airlines flight attendants ratify agreement
By Cory Johnson
6 June 2000
Use
this version to print
Northwest Airlines flight attendants ratified a new five-year
agreement by a 68 percent margin last week, with some 87 percent
of 11,000 members of Teamsters Local 2000 voting. The agreement
provides for initial pay raises of from 8 to 27.7 percent with
the higher raises distributed to the lowest paid flight attendants.
Northwest has been notorious for retaining a lower tier "B"
scale for new employees, amounting to a mere $15,000 yearly compensation
that qualified some attendants for food stamps and forced others
to work a second job. The highest salaried attendants under the
old agreement were paid around $40,000. On average, over the next
four years pay increases would total 10.5 percent with raises
being increased every 12 months.
Pensions are to be immediately increased by 86 percent from
a rate of $35 to $65. The pension rate is multiplied times the
number of years of service to determine monthly retirement payments.
Other issues include an increase in the number of guaranteed hours
for reserve attendants from 70 hours a month to 75 hours. An additional
paid holiday was added. In a concession to the company, flight
attendants may now be required to wait at an airport for possible
reserve duty. Health insurance benefits will now be available
not only to families but extended to domestic partners.
The wage increase is to place Northwest second to Delta Air
Lines in terms of highest pay, although the five-year agreement
leaves room for upcoming contracts at other airlines to surpass
this mark. The agreement received the usual plaudits from Teamsters
international President James Hoffa and Local 2000 President Billie
Davenport. But whatever gains made in the agreement were in spite
of the Teamsters bureaucracy. From the beginning the union leadership
fought to frustrate and beat down a considerable determination
on the part of flight attendants to achieve a contract that addressed
their concerns.
The effort to force through a substandard contract by the Teamsters
last year was given a sharp rebuke when 69 percent of the membership
voted against it. Northwest then broke off talks in December.
Over the New Years holiday Northwest was forced to cancel 30 percent
of its flights and charged the union with conspiring to call an
illegal sick-out. Under the cover of a federal lawsuit the company
launched a witch-hunt against militant workers.
The Teamsters bureaucracy acted to protect its officials against
financial damages, while abandoning rank-and-file members who
had proven to be obstacles to the union's collaboration with management.
With the backing of a judge's court order, investigators hired
by Northwest seized the computers of two flight attendants, Ted
Reeve and Kevin Griffin, who ran web sites devoted to uniting
union members for a decent contract. Their computer hard drives
were copied and searched for incriminating evidence. A leader
of the opposition was removed from the negotiating committee for
communicating to union members the bargaining position of the
bureaucracy. A dozen flight attendants were terminated or forced
to resign by Northwest and it is not clear that the Teamsters
made any provisions in the final agreement to get their jobs back.
In the end, many of the low-paid, low-seniority flight attendants
admitted they voted for the agreement because they could not financially
hold out any longer. "I need the money now," one attendant
told the Minneapolis Star-Tribune newspaper. Others concluded
that a better agreement could not be reached under the Teamsters
leadership. But despite the company onslaught and the betrayals
of the Teamsters officials, a considerable number of flight attendants
still recorded their opposition by voting against the agreement.
The experience at Northwest speaks volumes about the degeneration
of the labor bureaucracy. During the 1990s workers at Northwest,
under pressure from the company, media and their unions, gave
emergency concessions to help Northwest avert bankruptcy. While
the company returned to record profitabilityand executives
reaped gigantic bonuses, salaries and cashed in stock optionsthe
airline, aided by the complicity of the unions, balked at settling
contracts when management reopened talks in 1996.
In 1998, the attempt by the International Association of Machinists
(IAM) to force down an inferior contract led mechanics and cleaners
to dump the union and bring in the Airline Mechanics Fraternal
Association. Like the flight attendants, several mechanics found
themselves victimized by dismissals. The remnant of clerks and
office personal still in the IAM were later forced to accept essentially
the same contract.
In 1998 the pilots went out on strike in an effort to win their
demands. Separate agreements were also carried out in isolation
for meteorologists, flight dispatchers and technical support workers.
Mechanics and cleaners are still without a contract.
The recent merger announcements involving United Airlines and
US Airways, and American Airlines and Northwest, are a sign of
a new round of consolidation in the airline industry that will
inevitably result in a renewed assault on workers' jobs, living
standards and working conditions.
See Also:
Airline
Workers Issues
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |