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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Airlines
Northwest Airlines fires flight attendants accused of organizing
job action
"The company loves to use these intimidation tactics"
By Cory Johnson and Jerry White
14 March 2000
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this version to print
Northwest Airlines announced March 8 that they have fired 12
flight attendants for allegedly organizing a sick-out over New
Year's to protest failed contract negotiations. Teamsters Local
2000, which represents 11,000 flight attendants at Northwest,
put the figure of fired attendants at 18, along with another 6
attendants who resigned following interrogation by company officials.
The firings stem from a suit filed by Northwest which alleges
that Teamsters Local 2000 and some 21 individuals conspired to
organize the job action, which the airline says caused the cancellation
of over 300 flights. A federal judge gave Northwest the power
to hire a third party to confiscate the personal computers of
the 21 defendants and search for information to support the company's
allegations. Northwest indicated that electronic mail and the
Internet played a role in instigating the sick-out.
The fired flight attendants are based in Detroit, New York,
Los Angeles, Honolulu and the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul.
Northwest loves to use these intimidation tactics,
one flight attendant in Honolulu told the World Socialist Web
Site. We knew it was just a matter of time. This is
the way the company operates. But we won't be frightened. After
the firings, one flight attendant organized a protest last Friday
at an appearance of Vice President Al Gore in Bloomington, Minnesota.
She held up a sign saying, '18 down, 10,982 to go!'
The Teamsters announced they would file grievances on behalf
of the fired attendants who come from Local 2000. Local President
Billie Davenport said that none of the sick calls were falsified.
But many flight attendants believe this is an empty gesture, and
that the union will do little or nothing to defend the victimized
workers. The time for grievances is long past, an
attendant told the WSWS.
The local president clearly disassociated the union from the
job action. Not one flight attendant has said the union
encouraged them to call in sick or told them to call in sick,
she said. This had nothing to do with anything with the
union. The statement reflects a concern that Northwest is
attempting to obtain a ruling similar to the $45 million court-ordered
fine against the American Airline pilots union as a result of
their sick-out one year ago. Moreover, the union officials also
see the firings as a means of dampening rank-and-file dissent
and opposition to their efforts to push through a pro-company
contract.
More than four years of fruitless negotiations have deeply
angered most workers, while the company has raked in record profits.
The bitterness is compounded by the fact that workers' concessions
in the early 1990s helped Northwest overcome economic troubles.
Last June the Teamsters and Northwest reached a tentative agreement
that fell far short of rank-and-file expectations. Despite endorsement
by Teamsters International President James Hoffa and Local 2000,
the contract went down to defeat by a 69 percent margin. A group
of rank-and-file activists using the Internet to maintain communication
played a prominent role in galvanizing opposition to the agreement.
A new round of negotiations was halted last December by a federal
mediator who sided with Northwest and called the union's new contract
demands unreasonable. Contract talks were broken off with speculation
that they might not resume for months. These were the conditions
in the lead-up to the New Year's incident.
In a related event, two of the flight attendants that had their
computers confiscated filed an appeal March 9 in US District Court
in St. Paul. Lawyers for Kevin Griffin, of Honolulu, and Ted Reeve,
of North Hollywood, California, charged the company with engaging
in a fishing expedition that violated privacy rights. The normal
procedure for legal discovery, they claim, would have been to
allow the defendants to turn over relevant documents instead of
allowing a third party to confiscate all papers and electronic
records.
Lawyers charge that the keywords used to search the defendants'
hard drives were not specific. They claim Northwest lacked evidence
to back up its charges in the sick-out suit and was relentlessly
attempting to expand the scope of discovery in the hope that the
broadest of fishing nets would catch some possible wrongdoing
that could justify having brought the case against Griffin and
Reeve in the first place.
Griffin and Reeve run personal web sites that serve to inform
flight attendants and allow an exchange of ideas. Activity on
the sites revealed widespread dissatisfaction with the Teamsters
bureaucracy's role in the contract negotiations. The Teamsters
leadership provided lawyers for 19 of the defendantsmostly
union officialsin the suit, but refused legal defense to
Griffin and Reeve.
Kevin Griffin recently spoke with the World Socialist Web
Site.
Even though there had been an earlier agreement to halt
the searching of some computers, Northwest's attorneys violated
it and continued to search the hard drives of selected people
to see if there was any information that might lead them to Ted
Reeves or myself," Griffin said. "There were 16 base
representatives from the Contract Action Team and other volunteers
who were under discovery. So were the vice president and president
of Local 2000, but their hard drives were never searched.
Under the temporary restraining order I could have faced
fines or even jail time if anyone posted anything illegal or what
could be interpreted as illegal on my web site. The investigation
drove everybody to be anonymous on our web sites. I was surprised
by the extent to which they could go. I have a big difference
with the judge on this. He says a computer is no different from
a filing drawer. But what drawer has the equivalent of 3.2 million
pages of text? They didn't search the company computers or the
top union officials'; they did a search of my personal hard drive.
If Northwest could stop us and win by intimidation, then
no one would stand up to them. The Internet has been the best
thing for flight attendants to communicate. Geographically we
are all over the world. Before we were even in different locals.
But now we can act together. We don't always agree, but we learn
information in a timelier manner. Before it took three years to
know what the union and management was up to. Our communications
put pressure on both. That's why they want to shut us down.
The union did not stand up for the majority. It rolled
over. That's because they had tried to push through a tentative
agreement and it failed. They were happy when we were under the
Temporary Restraining Order because it would help them push through
the next contract. That's what they are counting on now.
The union has not provided any legal help. As far as
they are concerned we should shut up and go away. We're fighting
the union, not just the company. By communicating on the Internet
we have seen that the union represents a different class, they
are not for us. The officials, who have been there for years,
are only concerned about filling their own pockets.
See Also:
Action against dissidents
in airline contract struggle
US court orders seizure of Northwest flight attendants' home computers
[11 February 2000]
The Northwest,
Air Canada strikes and the globalization of the airline industry
[4 September 1998]
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