• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Northwest flight attendants okay bargaining agreement

NEW YORK
Tue May 29, 2007 9:03pm EDT
Passengers read newspapers in front of a Northwest Airlines Boeing 747 at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport, February 6, 2006. Northwest Airlines Corp.'s <NWACQ.PK> flight attendants ratified a new collective bargaining agreement, the No. 5 U.S. carrier said on Tuesday as it prepares to exit bankruptcy. REUTERS/John Gress

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Northwest Airlines Corp.'s NWACQ.PK flight attendants ratified a new collective bargaining agreement, the No. 5 U.S. carrier said on Tuesday as it prepares to exit bankruptcy.

Bonds

The company said flight attendants will receive a $182 million unsecured claim in the bankruptcy, which will be sold for cash, and then distributed to flight attendants upon the company's emergence from Chapter 11, which is scheduled for later this week.

The agreement also includes additional contract modifications designed to improve the flight attendants' work environment, the company said.

The carrier said earlier this month it will end its 19-month bankruptcy on May 31 with $2.5 billion in annual cost savings and an equity value of about $7.8 billion.

Northwest's Chapter 11 exit will mark the first time in five years that a major U.S. airline has not been in bankruptcy.

Employees have been outraged by the airline's $1.4 billion in labor cost savings made to facilitate its restructuring.

Flight attendants, in particular, had been riled by Northwest's use of its court permission to void their contract and impose wage and benefit cuts.

Employee discontent intensified this month when the company revealed a management compensation plan that awards Chief Executive Doug Steenland stock and options potentially worth more than $20 million as they vest over four years.



More from Reuters

Photo

Democrats reach deal on health bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democratic healthcare negotiators said they agreed on Tuesday to replace a government-run insurance option with a scaled-back non-profit plan and would seek cost estimates on the deal.

File photo of snow covered Uhuru peak of the largest free-standing volcano in the world, Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, taken on March 10, 2006. REUTERS/Neil Wallace
Postcards to Copenhagen:

Wish we weren't here

Mount Kilimanjaro's melting snow cap is one of many things forever altered by climate change. Here's a snapshot of a world dealing with environmental destruction.   Full Article 

People prepare to lower the body of one of the ministers killed in a blast from a suicide bomber last Thursday at Shamo Hotel in Somali's capital Mogadishu December 4, 2009.  REUTERS/Feisal Omar

Scenes of a "slaughterhouse"

War is just about the only story to tell in Somalia. But when one reporter tried to cover an event reflecting positive change, violence reared its ugly head again.  Full Article