The 24,000 flight attendants of the new American Airlines are
on an expedited track toward their first contract, leaders of the cabin crews'
union said on a visit to Philadelphia Tuesday.
"I am blown away by how well everyone is working
together," Laura Glading, president of the Association of Professional
Flight Attendants (APFA), said on her first trip to Philadelphia International
Airport since the merger of US Airways and American Airlines in December.
"Everyone is focused on the job at hand, and the
negotiating committee has bonded in a way I could have never imagined,"
she said. "It's happened very quickly."
Glading was joined by Roger Holmin, president of US Airways
flight attendants' master executive council. Both have been meeting with flight
attendants at US Airways hub airports. They were in Charlotte, N.C., Monday,
and will visit Phoenix and Washington to chat and answer questions in the crew
rooms.
The unions, APFA at American and the Association of Flight
Attendants (AFA) at US Airways, had been rivals and sparred briefly last fall
over which would represent the flight attendants, who make up one-quarter of
the 100,000 workers at the new American.
The US Airways group regarded the American flight
attendants' "conditional" labor agreement with the new company as
concessionary, Holmin said. The unions reached an agreement on bargaining and
representation, keeping the best of each airline's contracts "culturally
and monetarily as our starting point," Glading said.
The bargaining committee is composed of seven US Airways and
seven American flight attendants. The union submitted its opening proposal to
the company April 24. The negotiation schedule will be expedited, with 150 days
to get a contract or go to binding arbitration.
"The AFA and APFA both realized the flight attendants
did not want a representation election," Glading said. "They've been
through so much. They just want to move forward, see what their future is going
to look like, and get improvements."
About 2,300 active flight attendants are based in
Philadelphia, and 200 more are on medical and other leaves, Holmin said.
More than 75 percent of flight attendants assigned to
Philadelphia commute in from other cities to begin and end trips here.
There are challenges in combining 100,000 employees from
different unions, with varied work rules, seniority issues, and compensation
levels.
In April, six labor unions at US Airways wrote CEO Doug
Parker, who now heads the combined airline, demanding that management keep
commitments made during the merger to all its employees "and make this the
best airline in the world."
Glading, a strong proponent of the merger, said the flight
attendants "have been working very hard on the transition. It's a lot of
work, but I think if every labor group took the time and made the commitment
that they are going to make it work, they would realize the benefit of the
merger so much quicker."
Holmin added: "We have the mantra '24,000 strong'
because together we are stronger than we are apart. As long as we stay
committed to each other and solid, the company can't divide us, which is
sometimes a practice of management to divide work groups."
Source: Philly.com
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