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December 8, 2007
Unions Furious with Exclusion of Employees in UAL Payout
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Printable Version
Chicago, Ill., December 7, 2007 - The leaders of the three
largest Unions at United Airlines, Mark Bathurst, Chairman of
the United Chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA);
Greg Davidowitch, United Master Executive Council President of
the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA (AFA); and Randy Canale,
President and Directing General Chairman of the International
Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM), District
141, issued the following statement in response to the decision
of UAL executives, and approved by the UAL Board of Directors,
to give a $250 million special payout to shareholders:
"ALPA, AFA and the IAM, representing the overwhelming majority
of union-represented employees, are furious with the UAL Board
of Directors and management's decision to give a special
shareholder payout to the exclusion of employees.
"In every venue available, we have voiced our opposition to any
'shareholder initiative' that does not equally recognize
employee sacrifices. We have warned management that this move is
wrong for the business, wrong for the employees and ultimately
wrong for lenders. These executives have pushed through their
personal agenda while ignoring serious concerns raised by nearly
every stakeholder, industry trends and the company's financial
position. This is being done with utter disregard for the
interests of employees and the long-term success of United
Airlines.
"The best shareholder initiative would be one that invests in
the employees for the long-term success of United Airlines.
Shareholders in the pre-bankrupt UAL were issued new stock in
the same manner as every other constituency, including the
employees, when United emerged from bankruptcy. Today, employees
who lost their pensions and work longer hours for less pay
continue to suffer the affects of the bankruptcy. Not one penny
of employee concessions has been repaid.
"Since United Airlines exited Chapter 11, UAL management has
renegotiated excessive executive compensation packages for
themselves and they have renegotiated their agreements with
lenders. If they have the ability to renegotiate their own
compensation packages, if they have the ability to negotiate
with lenders, if they have the ability to negotiate with
shareholders to create another management bonus, then the have
the ability to enter negotiations with us." |
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