WorldTraveler said:
and you are correct that AA wants to customize pension law to once again reflect that it restructured after everyone else.
I wouldn't characterize AA's lobbying as attempting to customize the pension law applicable to AA; rather, I would characterize it as an attempt to make the pension relief law the same for all airlines, regardless of when they entered bankruptcy and when they froze their pensions.
AA got 10 years instead of 17 years to catch-up because of Arpey's well-meaning but mis-guided view that it was better to not freeze the pensions and wait for other airlines' wages to catch up to AA's wages. Good intentions, to be sure, but naive and not business-savvy.
So because AA didn't file for Ch 11 and freeze its pensions like DL did, AA was given a 10 year break while DL got a 17 year break.
Now, however, AA has finally joined the BK club and frozen its pensions, just like DL. But unlike DL, AA still doesn't get the optional flexibility that Delta gets (the extra 7 years of optional lower contributions).
Now that AA has done what DL did, hard to justify the disparate treatment in terms of equal protection under the laws, etc.
If you want DL to have that 7 year advantage over AA, then just say so, but it is a definite advantage for Delta if it gets that additional 7 years. If the economy turns south in 2019 and fuel prices spike again, DL will have a huge advantage over AA for several more years. Why not level the playing field in early 2015 so both massively profitable airlines play by the same rules if things go bad again before 2024?
WorldTraveler said:
I have no information on what Congress thinks about this but it is far, far harder to argue that AA should be given any break when it emerged from BK and is posting record profits which on a net basis have exceed other carriers.
I have no idea what Congress thinks, but I'd bet that the idea is more popular in the Republican-dominated House and soon-to-be Republican-controlled Senate than it is among posters to this website.
WorldTraveler said:
I would guess that AA's chances of getting a single carrier exemption at this point will be low esp. since pension quality in the US has deteriorated and AA is indeed making money. but I could be wrong.
Like I said above, I would characterize it as an attempt to get equal/identical treatment that's afforded to Delta, which is also making money. Both carriers are contributing more than the minimums during this highly profitable period, but AA wants a 17 year period just like Delta in case the future isn't quite as rosy as the present. And of course if AA gets to keep the favorable interest rate assumption, then I'm certain the amended law would give DL that same favorable interest rate assumption.