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Mon, May 07, 2007

NWA Pilots Protest CEO's Bonus

Steenland To Receive Millions In Stock Options

Add another airline to the list, whose pilots are unhappy with some big executive bonuses. Pilots at Northwest Airlines say they gave up $358 million in annual salary, as part of a nearly 24-percent cut in pay the pilots agreed to last year... which makes the $26.6 million stock bonus Northwest CEO Doug Steenland may soon receive a bit tough to swallow.

"Mr. Steenland grossly overreached and missed another opportunity to share the gain with the employees whose excessive concessions funded the airline's turn around," said Capt. Dave Stevens, chairman of the Northwest Airlines unit of the Air Line Pilots Association. "His compensation will be increased to $26.6 million while pilot payroll was slashed by more than 50 percent in bankruptcy causing morale to plummet. Employees expect a fair return, not 20 cents on the dollar while executives receive millions in pay and equity."

Pilots at the still-bankrupt carrier tell ANN last year's pay cut -- agreed to by the pilots union -- was on top of a $265 million annual concession Northwest pilots gave in December 2004. Northwest pilots' total concession of $623 million a year totals over $4 billion through 2011, the union states.

"It is incredible that the CEO profits from Northwest's bankruptcy at the expense of pilots, other employees and stakeholders," said Bob Elflein, secretary treasurer of the Northwest Airlines unit of the Air Line Pilots Association. "Northwest management's mantra seems to be 'we will reap the gain while labor bears the pain.'"

Snappy catchphrases aside, pilots at Northwest are the latest airline workers to express disbelief and outrage over executive bonuses. As ANN reported, pilots at American Airlines vehemently protested against bonuses and stock options awarded to management at the airline, which the union said exceeded American's $231 million profit for 2006 -- its first in six years.

Pilots at Northwest say their airline is also profitable once again -- thanks in large part to the severe labor cost reductions workers at the carrier agreed to under Chapter 11.

"Management must recognize and reward the employees with an equitable share in the company's success. To disregard our legitimate concerns is a recipe for continued labor unrest," said Capt. Ray Miller, vice chairman of the Northwest Airlines unit of the Air Line Pilots Association. "Pennies on the dollar from profit and success sharing programs are grossly inadequate compensation for our draconian 40 percent pay cuts and onerous work rules. Continued pilot concessions based on the Chapter 11 business plan that has already been far exceeded is absolutely unacceptable."

Northwest states Steenland's bonus isn't set in stone... and it dependent on the carrier's continued positive earnings.

"The actual equity compensation realized by Mr. Steenland for both restricted stock and stock options will be a function of Northwest's business performance and stock price over the four-year vesting cycle of the award," the airline told Reuters.

FMI: www.nwa.com, www.nwaalpa.org

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