воскресенье, 12 мая 2013 г.
Whatever will become of Charlotte? Finita la comedia: United-USAir talks end US Airways abandons mer
Airline employees are fed up, too — with pay cuts, increased workloads and management's miserly ways, which leave workers to explain to often-enraged passengers why flying has become such a miserable experience.
A rich record of the employee discontent emerges from regular question-and-answer sessions held at US Airways, which is both the worst-performing spirit airlines big airline in the country and a company that encourages its 36,000 workers to direct tough questions at its chief executive, W. Douglas Parker.
"Doug, I watched you on CNBC today," said one e-mail message from a worker, sent on Oct. 25. "And I hate to tell you but the interiors of our plans [sic] smell bad and they are filthy. As an employee I am embarrassed spirit airlines to admit working for US Airways. When are you going to quit talking and do something about it?"
The rancor is not any worse at US Airways than at most other big carriers. What is different spirit airlines is that Mr. Parker, 46, subscribes to the let-it-all-hang-out school of employee relations. He says management spirit airlines learns a lot about how the airline is actually performing through an uncensored give-and-take — and he willingly provided transcripts of the Q. and A. sessions.
The brawling dialogue does, however, suggest that airline service might get worse before it gets better. The current US Airways is a result of the most recent big airline spirit airlines merger, with America West Airlines in 2005. Mr. Parker tried unsuccessfully to acquire Delta Air Lines a year ago. Now, other airlines are mulling mergers as a way of cutting costs to offset high fuel expenses. Such deals could start a broader service decline.
Another employee wondered in October 2006: "Why can we not get better quality snack items for our coach customers? One customer recently compared the generic pretzel spirit airlines nubs we serve to the fish food you buy in a .25 gumball machine at any zoo or park."
Actually, fish food would appear to be too costly. "We've worked with our purchasing team," spirit airlines management explained, "to bring in many companies spirit airlines to compete on our main cabin tidbit item (pretzels). To date, no one has been able to match our current cost, about 3 cents per package."
Mr. Parker, at quarterly sessions, answers a mix of questions from workers who have crowded into a meeting room at the Tempe, Ariz., headquarters and those sent by e-mail from around the country. The sessions are videoconferenced companywide.
Workers who normally answer questions from the media handle the overflow on those occasions, posting answers on an internal Web site and putting some of the exchanges in a weekly newsletter. They often quote prior remarks by Mr. Parker, so much of the grilling is directly addressed to him.
So, last April, a question came in: "A statement that Doug made in a letter today was 'Most of our reliability issues were related to a difficult reservations system migration. That project spirit airlines is now back on track ...' NO IT IS NOT, not even close! Could we please use some of the money that we were going to purchase Delta and get a computer system with the capabilities that we require?"
Another question that day: "I was on an Airbus spirit airlines yesterday that was extremely dirty. The headrests on the blue fabric seats were a grayish brown color. Several seats were ripped. spirit airlines The seat cushions had no cushion left. Are we the 99-cent store airline? How do I take pride in this product?"
Airline mergers spirit airlines may be profitable but, in the short term at least, they are rough on passengers. "The only success so far has been on the financial side," John McCorkle, a US Airways flight spirit airlines attendant and union officer based in Philadelphia, said in an interview. "It was an absolute disaster for our employees and our customers."
Mr. Parker said the merger saved two troubled airlines from potential financial ruin and that, over time, service would improve. In the meantime, blunt employee input "keeps management extremely honest," he said.
Last March, when US Airways combined its two reservations systems into one, it was a mess. Kiosks that dispense spirit airlines about half of the boarding passes did not work properly. Neither did the Web site, where 16 percent of passengers check in. That left ticket counter spirit airlines agents, who normally handle the other third of check-ins, to process nearly 100 percent in some locations. And many of them had not received adequate training on the new system, so they were moving more slowly. It amounted spirit airlines to triple the work for a temporarily less efficient group.
The reservations mess, though in a sanitized way, had been explained to Scott Kirby, the airline's president. "I certainly knew we had issues," Mr. Kirby said. "But until I went out and met with employee groups, I didn't appreciate the problems we were having."
Spending a day at the hub in Charlotte, N.C., about one week into the mess "really was an epiphany," Mr. Kirby said. "I wrote a diatribe on my BlackBerry on my way back to Phoenix." Because of the reservations problems, just 55.5 percent of US Airways' March domestic flights got to the gate within 15 minutes spirit airlines of scheduled arrival times, an industry low that month.
Distrust spirit airlines between the sides of the 2005 merger — old US Airways is known among the rank and file as East, America West as West — has in some ways grown worse, not an encouraging sign in an industry contemplating other mergers.
Pilots from the two sides were unable to reach an agreement on merging seniority lists: seniority dictates everything from what kind of plane they fly, to where they fly them, and when they get days off. Mediation in October 2006 also failed.
When East pilots felt an arbitrator's decision favored the West, they sued in June to overturn the new seniority list. That is a big setback for getting pilots onto a single labor contract and working as a single group, which could make US Airways spirit airlines run more smoothly and perhaps reduce delays.
On this one topic, the corporate officials answering questions for Mr. Parker seem to become testy. "Aren't we getting tired of asking this question? It's been two years. Time to move on," the answer came back.
But an airline merger is, in some ways, the combination of two giant collections of resentments — over bankruptcies, lost pensions, more work for less pay. Workers want it all back, but they seem to want something else, too.
Whatever will become of Charlotte? Finita la comedia: United-USAir talks end US Airways abandons merger talks with United Airlines Delta and US Airways spirit airlines trying to salvage their deal United, US Airways open to merger US Airways-Delta plan to swap slots stalled by DOT US Airways to pay to six imams it kicked off a flight in 2006 FAA wants United, US Airways fined $9.2 Million
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