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Anmeldungsdatum: 26.11.2004 Beiträge: 1174
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Verfasst am: 02.12.2004, 22:16 Titel: More Delta Pilots Take Early Retirement |
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December 1, 2004
Almost 200 Delta Air Lines pilots took early retirement by Wednesday, as a concession package aimed at saving the airline from bankruptcy took effect.
The concession package, which cuts pilots' pay by 32.5 percent, will save the carrier USD$1 billion annually over the next five years. The deal also replaces the pilots' traditional pension plan with one that has fewer benefits.
Another 229 pilots aged 60 and above retired by midnight Tuesday and will receive retirement benefits based on their salaries before the pay cuts, spokeswoman for the pilots' union, Karen Miller, said in an interview.
The 197 pilots who retired early were aged below 60.
"Delta will have to hire back some of the recently retired pilots to continue to staff the operations properly," Miller said.
To help ease the airline's staffing crunch, the union in September agreed to allow Delta to temporarily re-hire pilots who retired early, Miller said.
This year, 923 Delta pilots have retired so far, including 703 early retirees. On November 1, 69 pilots took retirement, including 55 who did so early. On October 1, 99 pilots retired -- 71 of them early.
The number of early retirements are "unusual" and "higher than historical levels," and are mostly due to ongoing concerns that pension plans would be eliminated, aside from the pay cuts that begin Wednesday, Miller said.
In June, 240 Delta pilots took early retirement -- a monthly record for the airline.
Delta's pilots, the company's only major unionized group, were the highest paid in the industry prior to the new contract.
As part of the concession package, pilots also agreed to a 16 percent cut in vacation pay, changes to the pension plan and increased cost-sharing on medical benefits.
Delta has been racing to cut costs across its business to avoid bankruptcy. The airline has been struggling with high costs, soaring jet fuel prices and weak airfares stemming from tough competition in the industry.
The early retirements would be another setback to the cash-strapped airline. "If our pilots retire prior to their normal retirement at age 60 at greater than historical levels, this could disrupt our operations," Delta said in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission two weeks ago.
Chief Executive Gerald Grinstein's plan to rescue the struggling airline would slash up to 6,900 jobs, or about 10 percent of its work force, over the next 18 months, and 10 percent pay cuts for executives and nonunion employees. Grinstein in September said he would go unpaid for the rest of the year.
Delta, which has about USD$20.6 billion in debt, has warned it would have to seek bankruptcy protection without the USD$1 billion in pilot concessions.
(Reuters)
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