Delta Reaches Tentative Agreement With Pilot Union to Deliver $1 Billion in Annual Savings
28 Outubro 2004 - 12:42PM
PR Newswire (US)
Delta Reaches Tentative Agreement With Pilot Union to Deliver $1
Billion in Annual Savings Efforts to secure additional stakeholder
participation and restructure debt progress as pilots prepare to
consider contractual changes ATLANTA, Oct. 28
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Delta Air Lines (DAL: NYSE) announced
that it reached a tentative agreement with its pilot union on
contractual changes designed to deliver $1 billion in long-term,
annual savings through a combination of changes to wages, pension
and other benefits and work rules. Pilots have until Nov. 11, 2004,
to vote on the agreement through an expedited electronic
ratification process. "Reaching a tentative agreement is an
important step in our march toward viability, and I appreciate the
negotiators' good faith efforts and hard work," said CEO Gerald
Grinstein. The company's chief executive also said that although
bankruptcy remains a possibility due to Delta's precarious
financial situation, "we are making significant progress and are on
course with our customer-focused transformation plan." The pilot
accord is a necessary element of the company's comprehensive
out-of-court restructuring initiative that is intended to deliver
approximately $5 billion in annual benefits by 2006 (as compared to
2002). It includes finalizing new financing arrangements,
restructuring debt, securing concessions from vendors and lessors,
retooling its operations and reducing non-pilot employee and
operational costs, including management overhead. "The pilot
agreement, which still is subject to ratification by the pilot
membership, is one very important and necessary piece of a complex
puzzle that must come together in time to begin to reverse the
impact of high costs, including unrelenting high fuel prices,
compounded by low revenues, and to stem our cash drain," Grinstein
explained. Delta recently announced that it has entered into a
commitment letter with American Express to provide up to $600
million in financing, subject to significant conditions, and also
reached agreement with some of its bondholders to defer
approximately $135 million in debt due in 2005. In addition, the
company said it is "on track" to deliver by the end of 2004
approximately $2.3 billion of the approximately $5 billion annual
target through its previously announced Profit Improvement
Initiative (PII). "The proposed pilot savings, as difficult and
painful as they are, will make a meaningful contribution to a
massive company-wide effort underway to help transform Delta into a
formidable and viable competitor. I am extremely grateful to all of
Delta's employees who are making enormous sacrifices to help our
company restructure on its own terms and avoid bankruptcy,"
Grinstein said. As a part of its out-of-court restructuring plans,
Delta is finalizing an Employee Reward Program to provide employees
with a combination of equity, profit sharing and performance
incentive payouts. The company has said it is committed to the
principle that employees will have an opportunity to share in any
success their sacrifice helps make possible. The company had
previously announced the elimination of approximately 6,000-7,000
additional non-pilot positions, including a 20 percent reduction in
its officer ranks. Other steps include further changes to pay and
benefits. These reductions, together with operational changes and
remaining PII initiatives, are targeted to deliver $1.6 billion of
the approximately $5 billion in total annual benefits targeted for
2006 as compared to 2002. Separately, Delta's flight
superintendents, represented by the Professional Airline Flight
Control Association (PAFCA), also are preparing for a ratification
vote on their contract following a tentative agreement reached
between the company and the union. In an internal message to
employees, Grinstein emphasized that "while there can be no
guarantees, the people of Delta are diligently and collaboratively
making every effort to avoid bankruptcy. Time is of the essence,
but given the additional sacrifices that undoubtedly will be
required if we file for bankruptcy, I believe it remains in our
collective best interest to restructure our company on our own."
Delta's top executive assured employees that the company's
transformation plan, announced in September, is moving forward.
"From instituting SimpliFares to improving our passenger-friendly
technologies; from dehubbing Dallas-Ft. Worth to strengthening
Atlanta, Cincinnati and Salt Lake City; from updating our cabin
interiors to adding more flights and destinations from our focus
cities; from growing Song to simplifying our fleet, our
transformation plan is well underway," Grinstein observed.
Statements in this news release that are not historical facts,
including statements regarding Delta's estimates, beliefs,
expectations, intentions, strategies or projections, may be
"forward-looking statements" as defined in the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All forward-looking statements
involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual
results to differ materially from the estimates, beliefs,
expectations, intentions, strategies and projections reflected in
or suggested by the forward-looking statements. These risks and
uncertainties include, but are not limited to, our ability to
reduce operating expenses, our ability to obtain necessary
financing or debt payment deferrals to meet our liquidity needs,
our pension plan funding obligations, pilot early retirements, the
cost of aircraft fuel, the effect of credit ratings downgrades,
interruptions or disruptions in service at one of our hub airports,
our increasing dependence on technology in our operations, the
outcome of negotiations on collective bargaining agreements and
other labor issues, the effects of terrorist attacks,
restructurings by competitors and competitive conditions in the
airline industry. Additional information concerning risks and
uncertainties that could cause differences between actual results
and forward-looking statements is contained in Delta's Securities
and Exchange Commission filings, including its Form 10-Q for the
quarter ended June 30, 2004, filed with the commission on Aug. 9,
2004 and its Form 8-K filed with the commission on Oct. 15, 2004.
Caution should be taken not to place undue reliance on Delta's
forward-looking statements, which represent Delta's views only as
of Oct. 28, 2004, and which Delta has no current intention to
update. DATASOURCE: Delta Air Lines, Inc. CONTACT: Corporate
Communications of Delta Air Lines, +1-404-715-2554 Web site:
http://www.delta.com/
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