Deals Allow For Cost Savings And, Perhaps, Midwest's Very
Survival
Midwest Airlines pilots and flight attendants have reached a
tentative cost-cutting agreement with the airline. The idea is to
keep the struggling airline solvent and prevent a possible
bankruptcy.
"This agreement provides the airline with the cost savings
management says it needs to help pull Midwest out of this financial
crisis," said AFA Midwest Express Master Executive Council
President Toni Phillips. "This is an extremely difficult situation
for the flight attendants, but we have committed to making an
investment in our airline so that Midwest will be strong and our
careers will be secure in the years ahead."
Pilots: It's Not Our Fault, But We're Here To Help
The ALPA negotiators
finalized the relief package with management late Thursday evening.
It now goes to the airline's 285 active pilots for a ratification
vote, which is scheduled to be completed by midnight on Tuesday,
July 15.
Capt. Jerome Schnedorf, Chairman of the Midwest unit of ALPA,
said the elected union leadership and Negotiating Committee
unanimously recommended that the pilot group vote in favor of the
restructuring agreement.
"While we maintain that our pilots are not the cause of our
airline's financial difficulties, in the end we must focus on
turning our airline around considering the current economic
situation in the industry," Schnedorf said.
On Thursday, the ALPA
unit representing Skyway Airlines, a wholly owned subsidiary of
Midwest Holdings, Inc. tentatively agreed to a multi-year contract
also designed to avert a bankruptcy filing. The company warned last
month that it would seek protection under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code
in mid-July if it did not receive substantial financial concessions
from its unions and leaseholders.
If ratified, the restructuring agreement will represent the
second time in less than six months that Midwest's pilots have
agreed to concessions. Midwest pilots have been earning reduced
salaries that had been slated to continue until Nov. 1 under the
terms of a temporary financial relief package that was ratified by
the union leadership earlier this year. More than 28 percent of
Midwest's pilots are already on furlough.
"Our primary goal in these negotiations was to find a solution
that addressed the needs of our airline while retaining an
individual pilot's ability to maintain his monthly income to the
extent possible. We believe that the restructuring agreement meets
that goal," Schnedorf said.
Milwaukee-based Midwest Airlines operates a fleet of DC-9,
MD-82, MD-88 and Boeing 717 aircraft to 24 cities throughout the
United States.