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- <text id=93TT0544>
- <title>
- Nov. 29, 1993: Fasten Your Seatbelts
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 29, 1993 Is Freud Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 62
- Fasten Your Seatbelts
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A strike at American foreshadows union turmoil industry-wide
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Riley/Atlanta--Reported by Scott Norvell/Atlanta, Carlton Stowers/Dallas
- and Leslie Whitaker/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Don't tell Emmett Koen about the chaos theory of air travel.
- He and thousands of other flyers lived it last week when American
- Airlines flight attendants staged the largest U.S. airline strike
- in nearly five years, a walkout that threatened to paralyze
- the nation's largest airline and ruin many a traveler's Thanksgiving
- holiday.
- </p>
- <p> While other angry passengers watched helplessly as ghost planes--no flight attendants, no passengers, just baggage--pulled
- away from the jammed gates at Dallas-Fort Worth International
- Airport, Koen fumed as he watched his $5,000 Hawaiian cruise
- slip away too. First his flight was delayed, then canceled.
- His proposed punishment for the strikers: that they "all be
- taken to the nearest tree and hung up by their thumbs and beaten
- with a two-by-four."
- </p>
- <p> Thousands of furious travelers were forced to scramble for flights
- on other airlines in hopes of finding an empty seat during the
- year's busiest week of travel. At Chicago's O'Hare Airport,
- a woman clutching a wedding dress in a plastic bag sobbed as
- she learned her flight to Antigua was disrupted. Elsewhere,
- many of American's 200,000 daily passengers camped out on concourses,
- their luggage serving as makeshift pillows. In Dallas one harried
- American ticket agent was at the end of her rope: "I just called
- my husband and told him that when I get home tonight, I'm going
- to need a back rub and a drink. Badly."
- </p>
- <p> The 11-day walkout, scheduled to end next Sunday, signals the
- latest problem for an industry struggling to pull out of a three-year
- nose dive (total losses: $10 billion). Just as some big carriers--American, Delta Air Lines and Continental Airlines among
- them--have begun to post modest earnings, the long-quiescent
- airline unions have started voicing their demands. Workers who
- feel underpaid and overworked are asking for their share of
- the emerging profits. Management's response: continued cost
- cutting. "No question about it," says Morgan Stanley airline
- analyst Kevin Murphy, "1994 will be the year of labor turmoil
- in the U.S. airline industry."
- </p>
- <p> The opening skirmish in this battle could have been uglier.
- The Allied Pilots Association last week voted at first to see
- if they should join the strike. They decided later not to count
- the votes because the flight attendants were so successful at
- interrupting American's flight operations. American chairman
- Robert Crandall, however, made no friends among his pilots after
- telling industry analysts, "If the pilots were in charge, Columbus
- would still be in port." The turbulence is almost certain to
- get worse. United Airlines machinists are angry that an employee
- bid to buy the airline two weeks ago crashed and burned. Delta's
- pilots are in a tailspin, with many refusing to accept the 5%
- pay cut that management has proposed.
- </p>
- <p> The major airlines find themselves wedged between newly intractable
- unions and a group of low-cost, no-frills competitors, like
- Southwest Airlines, which have slashed both costs and ticket
- prices. For example, Southwest's round-trip fare from Baltimore,
- Maryland, to Los Angeles is $209; an American ticket is $418.
- So profitable is Southwest ($73 million in 1992) that last week
- it ordered 63 new Boeing 737 airplanes, a rare event for the
- industry. A new entry called Eastwind, for example, will offer
- rock-bottom fares in January to specific cities and last week
- announced it will serve Atlanta ($71) and Boston ($46) from
- Philadelphia. These low prices are now the benchmarks: the major
- airlines' profitability will be determined by their ability
- to match them. "You can only get into the black by increasing
- revenues or lowering costs," says Tim Neale of the Air Transport
- Association of America.
- </p>
- <p> That's just what Crandall and others plan to do, with or without
- the union's help, since labor is the industry's largest and
- most controllable expense. "This isn't union busting," says
- analyst Murphy. "It's just plain economics." If airlines don't
- cut costs, they don't survive.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, one main reason airlines have made money at all is
- the concessions they have wrung from their workers. Thanks to
- a three-year agreement to reduce employees' pay 12%, the once
- deeply troubled Northwest Airlines has saved $886 million. American,
- United and Delta are all turning profits, thanks to layoffs
- and other cost-cutting measures, like the sale of nonessential
- assets, such as flight kitchens. These carriers all registered
- millions in third-quarter profits, with labor concessions playing
- a significant role. Says an impatient Denise Hedges, the head
- of American's 21,000-member flight attendants' union: "We have
- made sacrifices for 10 years now."
- </p>
- <p> Still, weak airlines, like USAir, will continue to rely on union
- concessions and cutbacks for their survival. No one needs to
- be reminded of what happened to Eastern Airlines, whose demise
- began with a machinists' strike in 1989.
- </p>
- <p> While they fight the union onslaught, the major airlines are
- moving to stop the likes of Southwest from stealing their core
- business. Continental Airlines, which emerged from bankruptcy
- last April, has launched CALite, a back-to-basics "cheapie service"
- based in Houston. Even though it uses union workers, CALite
- pulled in $1 million more than expected in October, its first
- month. Delta is also studying the feasibility of starting a
- low-cost airline.
- </p>
- <p> American Airlines' hardball response to last week's strike shows
- just how seriously the airlines are taking the new union threat.
- The strike could eat up all of the airline's $143 million in
- profits so far this year. American is recruiting replacement
- workers and has told striking flight attendants--who make
- an average of $25,000 a year--that they may not have a job
- when the walkout ends. Says American spokesman John Raymond:
- "All we are asking is that these people come into the '90s.
- Give us the concessions other airline employees have." The major
- issues: salary, work rules and medical benefits. Attendants
- want more money than American is willing to give them, and they
- don't want to help pay their medical costs. "American is poised
- to be a major profitmaker in the next couple of years," says
- union president Hedges. "It's time the employees start getting
- treated like the valuable resources they are."
- </p>
- <p> Just how these seemingly irreconcilable differences are finally
- worked out will set the financial course for the nation's airline
- industry. Until then, other travelers may well agree with Houston
- passenger Barbara Galentin, who got stuck in Dallas. "I finally
- told them I felt perfectly qualified to pour soft drinks over
- ice, pass out peanuts and show the other passengers how to fasten
- their seatbelt," she quipped. If you need a job, Ms. Galentin,
- American may have some openings.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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