The Great American Heist At AA "the company and union were BOTH promoting the take-it-or-leave-it option using the threat of a worse outcome if flight attendants said NO."
The Great American Heist At AA "The company and union were BOTH promoting the take-it-or-leave-it option using the threat of a worse outcome if flight attendants said NO."
How Collusion and Nepotism Defrauded the Flight Attendants at American Airlines and Cheated Them Out of Their Pension Contributions, Retiree Health Benefits and Profit Sharing
https://callingonthedoj.wordpress.com
Calling on William J. Baer, Esq, Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division, Department of Justice
William J. Baer, Esq, Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division.
Dear Mr. Baer,
I am writing you today as a flight attendant with American Airlines represented by the Association of Professional Flight Attendants (APFA) with the intent of filing a complaint.
As you know, American Airlines merged with U.S. Airways last year. As part of that merger, APFA President Laura Glading agreed to an expedited negotiations process with U.S. Airways CEO Doug Parker to reach a single-carrier contract with the newly formed airline. That agreement, initially referred to as the “Bridge Agreement,” was later called the Conditional Labor Agreement (CLA), and it outlined how the APFA would negotiate with the newly merged airline. Last December the CLA’s resulting tentative agreement failed to ratify because it fell short on the promises made by American’s newly elected chairman, Doug Parker. It was touted as being “industry leading,” but fell far short of that mark.
AMR Chairman Tom Horton learns that he’s going to be “ousted” with $36 million squashing any further objections from the Department of Justice who argued that the payout violated bankruptcy rules because it exceeded that of the lowest employee severance by more than ten times.
What flight attendants didn’t realize at the time was that the CLA was the result of a secret meeting hosted by U.S. Airways Treasurer Tom Weir at a restaurant in Manhattan. Why this matters is because Mr. Weir is Laura Glading’s cousin. The dinner meeting included Doug Parker, U.S. Airways President Scott Kirby, Tom Weir, Laura Glading, and two of Ms. Glading’s advisors. Why this is of importance is because Tom Horton, as president of AMR, was having merger talks with Doug Parker prior to AMR’s bankruptcy filing in November of 2011. These merger talks continued when Mr. Horton ascended to the position of CEO and continued even though Doug Parker was negotiating with American’s unions.
The reason I’m contacting the DOJ is because I strongly believe that Tom Weir created a conflict of interest when he brokered a meeting that led to an agreement that placed fixed labor costs on American’s flight attendants by denying flight attendants the opportunity to negotiate a fair and equitable contract based on (1) American’s performance, and (2) competition in the open marketplace. In essence what Tom Weir did was guarantee Doug Parker that he would have the lowest flight attendant labor costs amongst his industry peers. As a result, Mr. Weir would witness the expansion of his own position as treasurer at U.S. Airways to that of treasurer at American Airlines Group — a company three times in size.
The APFA would have members believe that Laura Glading’s cousin, Tom Weir, was an insignificant player in the deal that created the world’s largest airline. But as you can see from this photo, Mr. Weir is a significant player in the industry. Here he is discussing European bank debt at the 2012 ISTAT Americas Conference held in Scottsdale, Arizona. From the Aviation International News story “Euro Debt Crisis Limits Airline Finance Options.”
It’s important to note that the CLA violated APFA’s union constitution because the Constitution mandates that APFA’s representational bargaining authority is between American Airlines flight attendants and their “employer.” Laura Glading made an agreement with Doug Parker, the CEO of U.S. Airways, a non-employer, and therefore had no constitutional authority to do so.
APFA President Laura Glading (L), U.S. Airways CEO Doug Parker (Center), and TWU President Jim Little (R) talk to the Star-Telegram editorial board Monday, June 18, 2012 to discuss U.S. Airways’ moves for a “hostile Takeover.” Doug Parker then met with Tom Horton in Washington D.C. the very next day to have merger talks over breakfast. That same day, June 19th, the flight attendants learned of Tom Horton’s new contract offer referred to as the Last, Best & Final Offer (LBFO).
The CLA also violated the APFA Constitution because it (1) made changes to rates of pay, benefits and work rules, which required membership ratification, and (2) denied members the right to vote on changes to rates of pay, benefits and work rules that would take effect under the agreement reached through binding arbitration. This will be the second time in eleven years that American’s flight attendants have been denied the right to ratify their collective bargaining agreement — the first being in 2003.
In summary, what I allege is that Tom Horton, Doug Parker, Scott Kirby, Tom Weir and Laura Glading created a form of price-fixing by setting fixed labor costs on American’s flight attendants by means other than traditional negotiations. They did this by deceiving the flight attendants at American by telling them repeatedly that they had no real choice in the matter other than to support Tom Horton’s reorganization offer for fear of a worse consequence if they didn’t. The tactic closely resembles “Boulwarism,” only in this instance the company and union were BOTH promoting the take-it-or-leave-it option using the threat of a worse outcome if flight attendants said NO. This would be the third time American and APFA used this tactic on flight attendants — 2003, 2012 and 2014 — and in 2003 and 2014 the flight attendants were denied ratification. The last uninfluenced contract ratification was 2001.
APFA President Laura Glading is leading the charge at an April 23, 2012 union rally held at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Southern Manhattan. Laura Glading had already met in secret with Doug Parker at a dinner meeting hosted by her cousin, Tom Weir, a treasurer with U.S. Airways. At the meeting the terms for a future contract were outlined as were the terms by which that contract would be reached. Profit sharing was forfeited without the flight attendants’ knowledge or input, and this agreement was made with a non-employer in direct violation of the APFA Constitution.
It wasn’t until after the failed ratification that American’s flight attendants truly became aware of Mr. Weir’s involvement or of his family relationship with Laura Glading. Had Mr. Horton and Mr. Parker discussed ticket prices, this would have been a clear cut violation of antitrust and would have led to a DOJ investigation and possible fines. Because it was labor costs, the issue seems to have gotten lost in translation. The question I ask is: How can two airline CEOs collaborate on ways to create fixed labor costs in an effort to undermine the competition and not discuss ways to set fixed ticket prices in an effort to do the same?
American and APFA both initially asserted that the binding arbitration clause was meant to protect flight attendants in the event the company stalled at the negotiating table. As the voting commenced and members began questioning why the contract was far from being “industry leading,” the company and union both began touting binding arbitration as a detriment rather than the protective layer it had been hailed as only weeks prior. They literally did a one-eighty! Now the company and union both claimed that a NO vote would guarantee flight attendants a contract valued at $81 million (42%) less than the contract that was negotiated. This is the only example I know of where arbitration led to significantly less wages than was offered by the employer originally.
U.S. Airways CEO Doug Parker (L) and American Airlines CEO Tom Horton (R) laugh while visiting with employees after a news conference at DFW announcing that the hostile takeover was actually a well planned merger..
Apparently the company and union never envisioned a NO vote, and both felt that by using the threat of members getting less that this would motivate members into voting YES. When threats and intimidation failed, the company agreed to throw in the additional $81 million that both the company and union adamantly asserted would be lost due to a NO vote. This gesture was done simply because the company and union had no other option for cleaning up the mess. To rephrase, the constitutional violations that led members to a new contract would have been deemed moot once members ratified the end result. When ratification failed, the company and union scrambled to hide the fact that the members’ rights were trampled and hoped that no one noticed by offering flight attendants money that theoretically wasn’t negotiated.
To make matters worse, American had to throw in an additional 4% because they realized that the 1/15/15 pay check was going to be virtually the same as the 12/15/14 pay check when the rise in benefit costs were factored in. Simply put, the raise would have been zilch and the members would have been angry. Knowing that this entire dilemma was the result of collusion and nepotism, the company and union faced a quagmire which could only be solved by offering flight attendants money that wasn’t negotiated. Oddly enough, the 4% raise only applied to unionized employees who had a new contract — the flight attendants — pilots, mechanics, ground workers and agents were without a new contract and got nothing. In twenty-five years with American, I’ve never seen management offer employees money that wasn’t negotiated. This was an absolute first.
It is my firm belief that these collusive actions along with the violations to the members’ union constitution gave American an unfair advantage over United and Delta because they placed artificial labor costs on American’s flight attendants and forced them to accept a non-ratified contract for an unspecified duration while forcing United and Delta to have to compete with American’s flight attendant costs through traditional channels of negotiations. One could argue that Delta can impose wages and benefits as they see fit, but the argument to that would be that in doing so it would drive the members to organize — something Delta just doesn’t want.
The fact that Delta flight attendants are nonunion — an anomaly in the industry — stems from the fact that Delta management pays their flight attendants above their unionized counterparts. Yes, Delta and American share similar wages. But this means nothing when we consider that a top wage Delta flight attendant received $9,000 in profit sharing whereas American’s top wage flight attendant received ZERO. (I should note here that Tom Horton gave flight attendants profit sharing as part of their reorganization contract (LBFO), but Laura Glading singlehandedly gave it away during her secret meetings with Doug Parker (again, a non-employer).
Laura Glading, Tom Horton and Doug Parker excited that the process is almost complete. All they have to do now is sell flight attendants a contract that will avoid binding arbitration so as to make any complaints from the flight attandants moot.
In closure, I am calling on the DOJ to investigate whether the process by which the CLA and subsequent single-carrier contract were reached in violation of antitrust. While flight attendants are certainly excited about the historical success of the newly merged airline, that success should include them, not marginalize them by means of a strategy designed to place them at a complete disadvantage at the negotiating table — nepotism and collusion.
To simplify my complaint, these are the bullet points of the key issues to help your office in its review:
* Summer of 2011: AMR President Tom Horton and U.S. Airways CEO Doug Parker were having merger talks prior to AMR’s November 2011 bankruptcy filing
* CEO Gerard Arpey hires bankruptcy counsel and then announces bankruptcy.
* President Horton rises to Chairman as Gerard Arpey steps down and merger talks with Doug Parker continue.
* U.S. Airways Treasurer Tom Weir arranges a dinner meeting between Laura Glading, Doug Parker and Scott Kirby at Oceana Restaurant in Manhattan.
* At the meeting, Doug Parker and Laura Glading agree that Ms. Glading will accept Tom Horton’s reorganization proposal to the flight attendants as dictated, and also agree to expedited negotiations once Mr. Parker becomes CEO of American Airlines Group. They also agree that in the event of an impasse or failed ratification that the parties would submit to binding arbitration with the economic ceiling for the resulting contract to be placed at the “industry aggregate” of United Airlines and Delta Airlines and that the aggregate would be determined by the company.
Doug Parker and Tom Horton are excited that the unions are financing the merger through the elimination of retiree benefits and profit sharing.
* Laura Glading accepts Tom Horton’s reorganization proposal as dictated telling flight attendants that if they vote NO that they’ll be forced to work under the 1113 Term Sheet. Ms. Glading then urges flight attendants to ratify Tom Horton’s offer based on alleged promises made by Doug Parker (a non-employer) that their losses would be recouped in a post-merger contract.
* Flight attendants accept Tom Horton’s reorganization proposal referred to as the “Last, Best & Final Offer” (LBFO) because they’re told they have no choice other than the 1113 Term Sheet.
* Laura Glading agrees to forgo profit sharing as part of the new contract in an agreement made with Doug Parker (a non-employer).
* The pilots vote NO on their LBFO and go back to the negotiating table whereby they negotiate an enhanced offer — the LBBFO.
* The flight attendants learn of the secret meeting hosted by Ms. Glading’s cousin, Tom Weir, by reading an interview with Ms. Glading in the Dallas News.
* The flight attendants fail to ratify the tentative agreement reached through the process outlined in the CLA.
* American tells flight attendants that they must go to binding arbitration even as the company extends negotiations with the pilots two times in an effort to avoid binding arbitration.
* Binding arbitration delivers a contract valued at $81 million less than the contract offered by American.
* Doug Parker agrees to give the flight attendants the $81 million.
* Doug Parker offers an additional 4% wage increase to unionized employees with a new contract (just the flight attendants).
* Flight attendants wonder how they could be so shortchanged in the face of historical profits.
Your prompt attention in this matter is most appreciated.
Respectfully,
Rock Salomon
American Airlines Flight Attendant
Association of Professional Flight Attendants Member
Talking Points for Attorney’s and the Media
The following helps to better explain the situation the flight attendants are dealing with at American as well as the actions that led up to it.
American’s goal has long been to align the airline’s labor costs with those of low-cost carriers, it was never to turn the airline around or save the airline from bankruptcy. While American’s executives claimed to be on the “courthouse steps” in 2003, we know that the AMR Board never authorized a bankruptcy petition, therefore the airline’s executives were misrepresenting the airline’s true financial condition to both the airline’s shareholders as well as the airline’s employees, and they did so with a blind eye of the Board. That was the foundation of American’s 2003 Restructuring, which led to the RPA Lawsuit.
The four issues that I feel could be of legal interest are: (1) the improper distribution of EQUITY shares in the new American; (2) the gross mismanagement of the flight attendant PENSION plan by an American subsidiary; (3) the disproportionate SEVERANCE package awarded the former CEO; and (4) the way in which the union negotiated a contract that HOGTIEDmembers at the bargaining table by negotiating outside the scope of the union’s representational bargaining authority:
(1) EQUITY: My union, the Association of Professional Flight Attendants (APFA), promised members a distribution of equity shares in the new Airline in exchange for a YES vote on the company’s concessionary bankruptcy offer referred to as the Last, Best & Final Offer (LBFO). The result was an eligibility formula that intentionally excluded and/or denied members shares in the new American and then allowed union governance to garner additional shares by (1) making the Eligibility pool smaller through exclusion, and (2) by claiming expense reimbursements as income so as to carve out a larger share by taking shares from those deemed eligible. (DOL Complaint)
(2) PENSION: The flight attendant pension plan was administered by an AMR subsidiary called American Beacon Advisors. The plan was grossly mismanaged to the point that American said that it couldn’t maintain it anymore and that it needed to be terminated. They tried dumping it on the PBGC but Josh Gotbaum said the company couldn’t because it was financing its own bankruptcy (Debtor in Possession). APFA was aware of the gross mismanagement by Beacon but allowed the mismanagement to continue.
(3) SEVERANCE: The Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a lawsuit challenging AMR’s merger with US Airways and that lawsuit contained several objections, one of which was the severance package awarded the former CEO, Tom Horton. In short, the bankruptcy laws changed in 2008 because of the numerous bankruptcies, and this new law stated that the CEO of a bankrupt company could not be given severance that exceeded the lowest employee severance by more than 10 times. Simply put, the employee severance needed to be 10% that of the CEO.
At issue here is the fact that Tom Horton was awarded $20 million by the AMR Board for which the DOJ objected citing the 2008 change in bankruptcy code. In the end, the DOJ settled with AMR and Tom Horton with a slot forfeiture at DCA and LGA and Mr. Horton’s severance was reduced to $17 million. The flight attendants got $40k severance to leave if they so chose.
If we take the law at face value, the CEO was entitled to only $400k because of the 2008 law as applied to the flight attendants’ severance of $40k, meaning that the employees were entitled to 10% of what he received, which was $1.7 million.
When I consider that the DOJ already outlined the lawsuit in their antitrust objection, it’s fair to say that a lawsuit challenging Tom Horton’s severance on the grounds that it exceeded the value allowed by law could lead to a hefty settlement. If I recall, 2,000 flight attendants left with $40k, and each of those 2,000 were entitled to more in my opinion because of the law.
If we consider all those who were eligible to take the Early Out offer but opted not to because of the low $40k severance, there could be a subclass of plaintiffs that could claim that they would have taken the buyout had the company/union been honest about the CEO’s severance.
Those are just brief. Following explains how flight attendants were HOGTIED at the bargaining table and forced to accept a contract they rejected:
Bringing the story up to 2011, American had been in negotiations with it’s three labor groups following the 2003 Restructuring and the company was procrastinating at the bargaining table. What took only weeks to give away now took years with no movement at the bargaining table. American was determined to get cost-neutral (“zero-sum”) contracts with it’s unions so as to maintain the savings acquired by the 2003 Restructuring.
In short, American cried broke to the point where investors lost interest in the airline’s stock and the stock plummeted causing a ten-fold spike in pilot retirements in the Fall of 2011. The pilots’ retirement package was tied to the airline’s stock price and pilots were losing more and more retirement funds each day.
Ironically, the airline had almost $5 billion in cash and has just placed an order for 460 new airplanes — the largest order in aviation history — yet the company was claiming that it couldn’t compete and that it couldn’t offer new contracts that restored some of the 2003 concessions.
American filed for bankruptcy simply to slow the hemorrhaging of pilots because there was no way to fill the vacancies in a timely fashion. Bankruptcy was the only option for the airline to hold onto its pilots.
American bought a small piece of real estate in lower Manhattan so it could file for bankruptcy in the Southern District thus avoiding the Eastern District where the airline services two major airports: JFK and LGA.
By the airline’s own account, American had been in talks with US Airways since April of 2011 — bankruptcy was filed in November of 2011.
US Airways CEO Doug Parker and American’s president, Tom Horton, had discussed the idea of a merger on at least two occasions: (1) at an executive luncheon in Wyoming and (2) over breakfast in Washington D.C. (Horton had risen to CEO).
At the time of the D.C. Meeting, both airline’s PR machines were in full swing promoting the idea that US Airways was making a “hostile bid” for American and that if successful would result in job loss at American. This was to scare employees so as to make them more accepting.
While all this was taking place, US Airways management was secretly meeting with union leadership. While we don’t know just how privy Tom Horton was to these meetings, we do believe that Tom Horton and Doug Parker were strategizing on how to put the two airlines together without raising labor costs and utilizing the strategy of good cop/bad cop so employees would be more willing to accept nothing in exchange for new management. Laura Glading stated repeatedly that employees needed “new management.”
We do know that Tom Horton and Doug Parker worked together in American’s finance department in the 1980s, and Mr. Horton has stated that the two are friends.
Anyway, in the case of American’s flight attendants, it just so happened that the treasurer of US Airways, Tom Weir, was also a cousin to Laura Glading.
Tom Weir hosted a dinner meeting in March of 2012 so that Laura Glading could sit down and discuss terms that would secure APFA’s support for a post-bankruptcy merger. The “hostile takeover” charade was transitioning itself to that of an “employee backed” effort to “oust” Tom Horton. Again, this charade was playing itself out while the two CEOs were having merger talks. Again, given the fact that American had almost $5 billion in cash entering bankruptcy and had just placed an order for 460 new airplanes, US Airways was in no position to buy American.
To back up, the secret dinner meeting took place at Oceana Restaurant in Manhattan and the guests included US Airways CEO Doug Parker, US Airways President Scott Kirby, US Airways Treasurer Tom Weir, APFA President Laura Glading, APFA Attorney Rob Clayman and APFA Economist Dan Akins. None of the elected members of the APFA Negotiating Team were present nor did they have any knowledge of the secret dinner.
Record of the dinner is noted in an interview Laura Glading had with a hired publicist, and that article found it’s way into the Fort-Worth Star-Telegram as well as a book written by Associated Press Contributor Ted Reed. The dinner’s expenditure is also noted in an LM-10 form submitted to the DOL.
The terms for the post-merger flight attendant contract were outlined at the secret dinner meeting and those terms were finalized a month later at a secret meeting in Phoenix, AZ.
The agreement was referred to as the “Bridge Agreement” and soon after the “Conditional Labor Agreement (CLA).” Again, none of the elected members of the APFA Negotiating Team were present nor did they have any knowledge of the secret meeting. Laura Glading refers to it as a “secret meeting” on video.
APFA members weren’t allowed to vote on the terms of the CLA as mandated in their union constitution even though the CLA made changes to pay, benefits and work rules. APFA stated that negotiations were outside the scope of “normal.” (The term “normal” was coined in 2003 when APFA accepted a non-ratified collective bargaining agreement against their members NO vote. Twice in eleven years APFA members have been forced to work under an agreement they voted down.)
When asked if the CLA needed membership ratification, APFA counsel responded by stating: “No. Under normal circumstances, an agreement such as the CLA would be sent to the membership for ratification. However, the CLA was reached in circumstances that were far from normal.”
The CLA also violated the members’ union constitution in that it was reached with a “non-employer.” APFA’s representational bargaining authority is between APFA members and their “employer.” Doug Parker was not an “employer.” He was the CEO of another airline.
In short, the CLA guaranteed Doug Parker that the merged airline’s flight attendant costs would be equal to or less than those of American’s two major competitors, United and Delta. I refer to this this price-fixing for employeesbecause it allows American to gain an unfair advantage over the competition by having a labor agreement with it’s flight attendant union that utilizes an artificial cost structure rather than one reached through Section 6 negotiations in the open market. Southwest wasn’t included in the formula, even though American claims Southwest to be a direct competitor — the reason being is that their flight attendants are the highest paid.
What Laura Glading essentially did was reach an agreement with a non-employer that hogtied APFA members at the bargaining table and gave them no recourse other than litigation.
The CLA was later merged into a “Memo of Understanding (MOU)” in a post-merger environment, which then included flight attendants from US Airways who were represented by the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA). The MOU was founded on the terms reached between Laura Glading and Doug Parker, and AFA members were allowed to vote on whether to accept the CLA/MOU’s terms or reject them. In other words, not all members got to vote on the terms that would dictate the terms for negotiations. APFA members were considered outside “normal” while AFA members were inside “normal” even though they just ratified a new contract only months prior.
The terms of the Bridge/CLA/MOU stated that upon exit from bankruptcy the airline and the APFA would negotiate a new contract in a matter of 60 days and that if the membership failed to ratify the new agreement, or if the company and union fail to reach an agreement, that “the parties shall immediately submit their dispute to final and binding interest arbitration. … for the purpose of achieving a joint collective bargaining agreement that is market- based in the aggregate.” The “aggregate” included just Delta and United and the terms did not include profit sharing or a buyout as offered by both United and Delta.
Where this story gets interesting is the fact that the parties did reach an agreement, but the members voted it down because it wasn’t “industry leading” like APFA had repeatedly stated it would be. Once members began calling it paltry, APFA began calling it “industry average.”
Once APFA realized that members weren’t biting, leadership began a campaign to scare flight attendants into supporting it based on the union’s own assertion that a NO vote would deliver a contract that was valued at $82 million less in binding arbitration even though they touted binding arbitration as a safety net against getting an unfair contract. The agreement was valued at $193 million in annual gains whereby $82 million represented a value “above the aggregate.” Flight attendants were given no cost breakdown or valuations regarding the contract so as to make any mathematical comparisons, and when members asked what the valuations were they were told that “the union doesn’t disclose that sort of information.”
What we do know is this: the company claimed that of the $195 in annual concessions reached in bankruptcy from $16,000 American flight attendants, 24,000 combined flight attendants were now going to be sharing $193 million in annual returns. There was no value given to the freezing of the frozen Defined Benefit Plan or the forfeiture of prefunded Retiree Medical Benefits. During bankruptcy, American agreed to give flight attendants a “match” to their prefunding return but then later reneged citing that the match was contingent on American successfully terminating the Retiree Medical for those already retired. In other words, APFA chose to throw retired members under the bus in order to give active members money that wasn’t rightfully theirs.
I should note here that even though the company/union agreed to a “$3,000 signing bonus” for 8,000 US Airways flight attendants to secure the vote, the agreement failed to ratify by 16 votes.
The company/union never envisioned a NO vote, and many members believe that the union was utilizing the balloting company’s observation service (vote monitoring) in an effort to get the company to sweeten the deal as the vote drew to a close. Management did sweeten the deal just as they did during the bankruptcy ratification as well as the 2003 failed ratification. (The terms members were voting on the during (first) day of voting were different than the terms voted on during (last) day of voting.)
In closure, when asked how APFA negotiations differed from those of the pilots, mechanics and ground crew, APFA responded by stating:
“Working off of the CBAs they ratified in bankruptcy, APA and TWU chose to negotiate with US Airways for full agreements that will take effect once American emerges from bankruptcy and certain other conditions are satisfied. We chose, instead, to negotiate a transitional agreement — the Bridge Agreement (CLA) — that replaces the LBFO and allows us to negotiate with the New American, on an expedited basis, for a full contract. That was the best path for FAs.”
Respectfully,
Rock Salomon
American Airlines Flight Attendant
Association of Professional Flight Attendants Member
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