This information is no longer current - it is for reference only. It is an archive review of events that took place during United Airline's Chapter 11 Bankruptcy from December 9, 2002 - February 1, 2006.

United Airlines' Flight Attendants Ratify Interim Relief Agreement

Date: January 8, 2003
Type: AFA Media Release
Contact: Sara Dela Cruz at 847-292-7170, ext. 524

United management must accelerate the pace of information sharing

CHICAGO — United Airlines flight attendants, represented by the Association of Flight Attendants, AFL-CIO, agreed to make extraordinary sacrifices today by ratifying an Interim Letter of Agreement with the airline that provides for a temporary nine percent cut in total flight attendant compensation.

The AFA United Master Executive Council recommended flight attendants vote “FOR” the agreement. Sixty-two percent of eligible flight attendants voted, with 94 percent of valid ballots cast “FOR” ratification of the agreement.

“This cut is very painful, especially since flight attendant compensation is so minimal to begin with,” said United AFA MEC President Greg Davidowitch. “Flight attendants have once again shown that we are committed to seeing our airline successfully emerge from bankruptcy.”

The nine percent interim cut in total flight attendant compensation will be accomplished through the elimination of COLA (cost of living) payments for the duration of the interim agreement, and an 8.16% reduction in base wage rates and all other pay factors including reserve override, understaffing pay, training pay, qualified and non-qualified purser pay, language qualified and language incentive pay, night pay, and ground pay.

The interim agreement will become effective if the airline gets similar voluntary or court-mandated agreements on interim concessions with all other work groups at the airline. If all groups participate in providing interim relief through ratification or court order, United will be able to meet the strict requirements of its financers in the bankruptcy process earlier than expected, allowing the parties an extended period of negotiations over a final, comprehensive agreement on flight attendant participation in United’s restructuring.

“United management has been less than forthcoming with the information necessary for our full participation in the airline’s restructuring,” Davidowitch said. “The flight attendants are willing to work with management to successfully restructure, but airline executives have to provide us with access to the information we need and with a clear plan and reasons for the changes they are requesting going forward.

“Recognizing the contributions of frontline employees is a key to this process because bankruptcy doesn’t end well when the workers and management are not on the same page,” said Davidowitch.

More than 50,000 flight attendants, including the 24,000 flight attendants at United, join together to form AFA, the world’s largest flight attendant union. Visit us at www.unitedafa.org.

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