Company Wants Immediate Negotiations With ALPA On New Plan
A federal bankruptcy court in Virginia has decided
US Airways meets the standards for a distress termination of its
pilots' pension plan. The decision came after a four day
hearing.
The court's finding completes the requirements for the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) to begin consideration of its
separate approval process to formally terminate the existing pilot
pension plan by the end of the month, in conjunction with US
Airways' planned emergence from bankruptcy protection set for March
31. The bankruptcy judge also authorized US Airways to come up with
a new pension to be worked out between the company and Air Line
Pilots Association (ALPA). Separately, the judge decided that the
issue of whether ALPA and the company had agreed to formal
termination of the pension plan in December 2002 was a "close call"
and deferred determination of that issue to arbitration under the
Railway Labor Act.

Siegle: We Didn't Wanna Do It
US Airways filed its formal notice to terminate the pension plan
with the PBGC on Jan. 30. The PBGC earlier suspended processing of
the formal termination as a result of a grievance filed by ALPA
pending its resolution. In a filing with the Bankruptcy Court,
among other matters, the PBGC advised the Court that while the ALPA
grievance was being resolved, the Court could proceed to consider
and render the decision made this evening, the required 60-day
pension termination notice period would continue to run, and the
PBGC would continue to review the distress termination information
submitted by US Airways.

David Siegel, US Airways president and chief executive officer,
said his negotiators and representatives of ALPA should begin
immediate talks.
"The company remains committed to providing $850 million over
the next seven years to fund a new pension plan for our active
pilots," said Siegel. "We have taken the steps to terminate the
existing plan only after we had exhausted all other alternatives.
But as we demonstrated to the court over four days of testimony, we
cannot meet the financial obligations of the existing plan and
emerge from bankruptcy protection without taking the action."
Thanks, But Don't Cash That Pension Check
Siegel reiterated comments from his testimony in
court on Friday when he said that the airline's pilots had shown
tremendous leadership and sacrifice throughout the company's
restructuring process. "We regret the impact that the plan
termination will have on our pilots but the ultimate goal must be
to save this airline and the jobs of almost 35,000 dedicated
employees. We respect ALPA's efforts to represent the interests of
its members and believe we can find a mutually achieved solution to
implement a new pension plan."
US Airways filed for Chapter 11 protection on Aug. 11, 2002, to
complete its financial restructuring and has kept to a fast-track
timetable to emerge from bankruptcy on March 31, 2003.
"Unfortunately, our airline was the first to go through a
restructuring in the post-September 11 environment, but we are now
seeing every other major network carrier going through its own
version of this difficult process. With the threat of war looming
and the industry in turmoil, we need to get out of bankruptcy
protection very quickly to secure the financing capital and federal
loan guarantee that we can only access after we emerge from Chapter
11," said Siegel.