Feb 20, 2008 8:11 am US/Pacific
Delta-Northwest Talks Blocked By Pilot Dispute
ATLANTA (AP) ―
-
-
The boards of Delta and Northwest had been expected to vote Wednesday on a combination projected to be worth $20 billion if a pilot deal was in place.
CBS
Northwest Airlines Corp. pilots have integration issues to
sort out. Not just the ones with their counterparts at Delta Air Lines Inc.
that threaten to scuttle talks to combine the two carriers. The ones with
Republic Airlines. From 1986.
An arbitrator is still sorting out seniority questions from
that deal, illustrating just how much the point matters. Employees at the top
of the list get first choice on vacations, the best routes and the bigger planes that they get paid more for flying.
The boards of Delta and Northwest had been expected to vote
Wednesday on a combination projected to be worth $20 billion if a pilot deal
was in place. Because of the impasse, the meetings could simply be briefings or
might be canceled altogether.
Delta and Northwest don't need a labor agreement between the
pilots unions before announcing a combination, but having one in place could
help speed up the integration of the companies down the line.
"I think they obviously recognize that with an unhappy
pilots group, that could make the merger and integration process painful and
expensive," said Dan Kasper, an airline consultant with LECG in Cambridge,
Mass.
Pilots at US Airways and America West waited until after the
2005 announcement that the airlines would combine to try to hammer out a
seniority and joint contract accord. Nearly three years later, no joint pilot
contract has been reached.
People close to the Delta-Northwest talks said the pilots
unions have agreed on a comprehensive joint contract, but cannot agree to how
seniority for the 12,000 pilots would work under a combined carrier. The people
asked not to be named because of the sensitive stage of the talks.
John D. Kasarda, a management professor at the University of North Carolina's
Kenan-Flagler Business School,
said it would be prudent for airline executives to wait for the pilots to
settle their differences.
"One more week to resolve a pivotal issue would
generate far greater returns to both airlines," said Kasarda, who has
studied airline labor issues. "I think Delta and Northwest are very astute
for getting that issue resolved."
Kasarda said blending seniority lists is always a problem
when airlines combine because different unions have different rules.
"That is a resolvable issue, and I believe it will be
resolved," he said.
A problem for the unions is the difference in age of their
pilots. Northwest pilots tend to be older than Delta pilots because many senior
pilots retired from Delta during the run-up to the airline's 2005 bankruptcy
filing.
Talk of airline consolidation has heightened in recent
months amid persistently high fuel prices, which are eating away at the
industry's bottom line.
A combination of Atlanta-based Delta and Eagan, Minn.-based
Northwest would create the world's largest airline in terms of traffic, before
any divestitures regulators might require.
Many terms of how a combined Delta-Northwest would operate
had been resolved as of Tuesday, two people close to the talks said.
The airline would be based in Atlanta, would be called Delta and Delta's
chief executive, Richard Anderson, would be head of the new company, the people
said.
It remained unclear what role Northwest's CEO, Doug
Steenland, would play, the people said. A joint Delta-Northwest would maintain
a substantial presence in Minneapolis and there
would be no furloughs for front-line U.S. employees, the people said.
The two airlines have roughly 85,000 total employees.
But pilots at Northwest still have unresolved issues 22
years after the carrier's combination with Republic Airlines.
Northwest, with its Pacific routes, had a fleet of wide body
aircraft and pilots who aspired to fly them when it bought domestically focused
Republic. Republic pilots poured into the ranks, some with years of experience
that would put them in line for the big planes ahead of Northwest pilots.
An arbitrator decided that pre-merger Northwest pilots would
stay in line for the big jets ahead of Republic pilots. That locked some pilots
out of wide body flying for decades, and caused serious bitterness. The Air
Line Pilots Association said an arbitrator is still working on some of the
issues, although it declined to provide details.
Arbitration might not be desirable for Delta's pilots union
because of concern that younger Delta pilots might lose the seniority they
obtained after the mass exodus of older pilots, Kasper said.
As a result, some of those Delta pilots may be on the same
footing as older Northwest pilots who have been flying longer, Kasper said.
There was no similar exodus of veteran Northwest pilots when
it went through bankruptcy because the company froze pilot pensions -- so they
still got what they had earned, although their pensions stopped growing. Delta
terminated its pilots' defined benefit pension plan while the company was in
bankruptcy.
A person close to the talks said Tuesday night that a small
group of Northwest pilot negotiators want thousands of young Delta pilots to go
to the bottom of the combined seniority list as part of agreeing to a deal. The
person said that was a major hang-up.
But Greg Rizzuto, a spokesman for Northwest's pilots union,
said Wednesday that the labor group is united, and all it wants is what's fair,
noting that a pilot's career is tied to his or her seniority ranking.
Airline consultant Robert Mann said some of the same sorts
of claims were made in the US Airways-America West talks.
"The US Airways guys, who were in bankruptcy, if they
had their druthers they would have stapled every single America West pilot to
the bottom of their seniority list," Mann said. "You have some of the
same emotion playing out here."
(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
Comments