A
Bonus for Airline
Employees
Months
before September 11,
airlines were asking
employee groups to
make wage and benefit
concessions to help
"save" the
faltering companies.
After September 11,
things only got worse.
Tens of thousands
of airline employees
have faced layoffs,
outright job loss,
or the insecurity
of knowing that their
jobs are not secure.
Airline executives,
desperate to avoid
bankruptcy, have asked
employees to take
cuts in benefits and
pay to help "save"
the companies-and
of course, their jobs.
No company, no job.
While some of the
executives offered
to forego their salaries,
they didn't mention
that they would retain
their bonuses and
stock options. Some
employees agreed with
the plan to make concessions,
while others pointed
out that similar compromises
made previously by
employees of Braniff,
PanAm, TWA and Eastern
did not save those
employees' jobs. Nevertheless,
concessions were made
by those who had not
already lost their
jobs. There really
was no choice.
The
Nitty-Gritty from
the Top
In a hearing before
the Senate Committee
on Commerce, Science
and Transportation,
Mr. Edward Wytkind,
President of the Transportation
Trades Department,
AFL-CIO, stated the
problem this way:
"Aviation
industry workers,
including employees
of airlines, Boeing
and aerospace suppliers,
and airports, have
suffered unprecedented
job loss and economic
uncertainty. Some
100,000 airline
employees are out
of work or facing
imminent lay-off.
Another 30,000 Boeing
workers are laid-off
along with 51,000
additional aerospace
employees. But it
is the multiplier
effect of airline
lay-offs that is
most startling.
Airline industry
data show a combined
workforce exceeding
600,000. However,
the total workforce,
if related job sectors
such as airports,
aircraft manufacturing
and suppliers are
included, totals
10.9 million. In
other words, one
airline worker translates
into 18 additional
jobs in our economy.
And with bankruptcies
looming large, it
is easy to conclude
that the staggering
job losses will
only grow."
While
the airlines themselves
received huge bailouts
from the federal government
after 9/11, Congress
seemed unconcerned
about the fate of
the tens of thousands
of airline workers
Wytkind mentioned.
Many people who flew
without a care before
9/11 are now hesitant
to board a plane at
all. While the need
for airport safety
is obvious, new security
requirements have
made the airport hassle
three times the ordeal
that it was previously.
Skyrocketing fuel
prices have translated
to higher costs for
airlines and higher
passenger fares. This
means fewer passengers,
fewer planes, and
fewer jobs in the
airline industry,
with employees paying
the biggest price.
In June of 2005, US
Airways terminated
its pension plan.
Shortly thereafterUnited
Airlines went to bankruptcy
court, and its petition
to eliminate its pension
plan was approved
by a Chicago bankruptcy
judge in May of 2005.
That wiped out $9.8
billion in future
benefits United Airlines
had promised its employees.
Since then, American,
Delta and Northwest
have all fallen into
financial trouble,
causing more layoffs.
Employees all over
the US have long been
reassured by these
words: "If anything
happens to the company,
the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation
(PBGC) will pay your
pension. It's like
pension insurance.
We pay into it for
you." It sounded
like a foolproof plan
to laid-off airline
workers, as it would
to most of us, until
they found out that
the PBGC is underfunded
and does not pay retirees
their full pension
amounts. Once again,
though, airline executives
receive everything
they were promised.
Couldn't they have
worked somewhere else?
After all, the unemployment
rate is low. Jobs
are plentiful. Right?
Not exactly. The US
Department of Labor
reports that 7 of
the 10 jobs expected
to grow most rapidly
until 2012 pay less
than $13.25 an hour-some
much less.
The 7 top fields are
retail sales clerk,
customer service representative,
food service worker,
cashier, janitor,
nurse's aide, and
hospital orderly.
For
comparison, look at
the example of an
airline mechanic.
In Indianapolis, where
mechanics checked
hundreds of planes
for safety, mechanics
averaged $31 an hour.
Family men in their
30s and 40s, they
bought houses and
cars and other things
in line with that
salary. While they
were sent for "re-education
and training"
so that they could
re-enter the workplace,
they found that the
new jobs they were
offered were far below
their skill levels
and far below the
wages they needed
to pay their bills.
They were concerned
that they would have
to file for personal
bankruptcy-but with
no federal bailout
to save them. Many
laid-off airline employees
take lower-paying
jobs simply for the
health insurance,
hoping somehow to
hold on to their houses
and cars and to hold
off the credit card
companies until things
improve.
Suppose
you are still employed
by an airline, but
your paycheck and
benefits have shrunk,
or you're a retiree
who got the "PBGC
shock." Did your
mortgage shrink? Your
car payment? Your
insurance or phone
or grocery bill? Of
course not. You are
left to make up the
shortfall.
In the title of this
article, we mentioned
a bonus for airline
employees. That means
former airline employees,
too. Whether you're
still flying the not-so-friendly
skies, working at
a low-wage job, or
trying to figure out
how to survive on
your reduced pension,
there is an easy way
to make up the deficit
in your budget. You
can do it wherever
you are, whenever
you want. You will
be in control of how
much you work and
how much you make.
Many call it a home
business, but the
truth is that you
can carry on business
from your hotel room,
at the airport, on
your lunch break,
or at home with your
family.
All
you need is a computer
and a phone. It's
an answer that has
eased the minds of
hundreds of people
in situations like
yours.
For
free, confidential
information, simply
fill in the web form
below.