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WSWS : Workers
Struggles
Northwest Airlines demands concessions, job cuts in bankruptcy
court
By Ron Jorgenson
24 January 2006
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Attorneys for Northwest Airlines and the unions representing
pilots and flight attendants appeared before a New York bankruptcy
court judge last week as the airline sought to bolster its demands
for massive concessions for its employees. Northwest filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy last September either to get a judge to
terminate its labor agreementsin order to unilaterally impose
wage- and benefit-cutting demandsor to use the threat of
canceling the union contracts to increase pressure on the labor
bureaucracy to achieve the same aims.
The air carrier went into the hearing having lost $4 billion
since 2001 and is currently losing some $8 million each day. Northwest
is pressing its workers to give up $1.4 billion in concessions.
The airline is attempting to carry out a restructuring of its
operations in a climate of intense competition, higher fuel prices
and cheaper ticket prices offered by nonunion companies that has
already sent US Airways and United into bankruptcy. Northwest
management says it needs to retire parts of its older fleet of
carriers and substitute more fuel-efficient smaller jets to operate
in the low-cost regional market as well as new and larger Airbus
or Boeing jets for more populated routes.
To emerge from bankruptcy the airline needs to raise $1.25
billion. But in the longer-term perspective of rebuilding the
airline it must spend an estimated $11 billion. The only conditions
under which lenders will provide this kind of capital outlay is
if the living standards of Northwest workers are reduced to a
level which guarantees a high return on their investment.
In the lead-up to the hearings, Northwest floated a proposal
to establish two new entities with provisional names of NewCo
and GroundCo. NewCo borrows from a scheme US Airways used to establish
a low-cost regional carrier that brought back laid-off pilots
with a new wage of $58,000, less than half of their previous salary
of $120,000. Current Northwest Chief Financial Officer Neal Cohen
held the CFO position at US Airways during its bankruptcy restructuring.
The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), which represents 5,000
pilots at Northwest, estimates the plan will result in the loss
of 1,000 pilot jobs.
Meanwhile, Northwests plan for flight attendants includes
arrangements to use nonunion flight attendants for three-quarters
of its trans-Pacific and trans-Atlantic flights, and 100 percent
of all domestic flights on carriers of 100 seats or less.
GroundCo, aiming to wipe out 5,000 of the 14,000 jobs held
by various airport ground workers and ticket agents, brought about
an agreement with the International Association of Machinists
(IAM), which represents these workers. If workers vote to approve
the proposal, the bankruptcy court will not consider nullification
of the unions contract.
The IAM agreement calls for an 11.5 percent pay cut that replaces
the temporary 19 percent pay cut imposed by a bankruptcy judge
back in November. Workers will lose one week of vacation and 12
percent of the workforce will see their jobs wiped out. Expressing
the complacency of the labor bureaucracy, IAM District 143 President
Robert De Pace in a message to workers called Northwests
agreement to only outsource 84 of the 733 jobs it had originally
targeted really amazing. But a clause in the agreement
will give the company power to increase the number of outsourced
jobs in the future, meaning that, far from ending the company
attacks on workers, the new pact only promises more cuts to come.
The deal with the IAM also indicates that the company and union
are still discussing the restructuring of health benefits. Control
of pension funds was transferred from the company to the union,
a measure which has a lot more to do with benefiting the labor
bureaucracy than union members.
Publicly, the pilots union has protested against Northwests
proposed cuts and threatened a strike should the bankruptcy court
throw out its contract. ALPA union leader Mark McClain has termed
Northwests strategy murder-suicide, as it is
estimated that any strike by the pilots of 30 days or more would
dissolve the company.
What concerns ALPA and the labor bureaucracy as a whole, however,
is not the devastating impact these concessions will have on their
members. Above all they are concerned that a court ruling to abrogate
the labor contracts would allow management to entirely circumvent
the union bureaucracy, thereby threatening the positions and privileges
of the union officialdom itself. In an effort to protect its interests
the union bureaucracy is seeking to prove its value to the airline
bosses and bankruptcy judge.
McClain acknowledged that his union has already agreed to wage
cuts of 40 percent to prop up Northwest. As the Detroit Free
Press wrote, One recurring debate at the hearings has
been whether unions should be entitled to shares in the company
in return for their concessions, a move other bankrupt airlines
have agreed to.
As opposed to NewCo, the pilots union has supported a new company
concept called N Star. Instead of a separate company
like NewCo, N Star would be a division within Northwest that would
supply the necessary cheap labor and its pilots would be under
the same contract as other Northwest pilots.
At the end of last week, bankruptcy Judge Allan Gropper put
off the decision to throw out labor agreements for the pilots
and flight attendants and urged the two sides to reach concessions
agreements outside his courtroom. Hearings were scheduled to resume
Monday.
The maneuverings of the labor bureaucracy both inside and outside
of the court have nothing to do with the defense of the living
standards of airline workers. Instead, workers living standards
are being bargained away to sustain the bureaucracy.
The antagonistic relationship between rank-and-file airline
workers and the labor bureaucracy has been highlighted by the
deliberate sabotage and defeat of the strike by 4,340 members
of the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association at Northwest.
From the beginning of the walkout last August, other airline unions
have instructed their members to cross the mechanics picket
lines and the IAM openly sought to unionize replacement workers.
Minnesota State AFL-CIO President Ray Waldron summed up the
complete indifference towards mechanics in an interview with Minnesota
Public Radio: Nothing we can do for them now. We can
put the body in a bag and try to find its rightful owner. But
theres nothing we can do for them today. Its over.
See Also:
The Northwest strike:
the end of the AFL-CIO and the political lessons for the working
class
[24 August 2005]
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