I took the few minutes time to e-mail Brundage, Arpey, Horton and MaryC as suggested and actually received the following reply from Jeff Brundage. It's the same 'ole corporate PR double-talk but I was actually still surprised to get this reply:
Thanks for your email and providing me with an opportunity to respond directly to you. My comments in the Bloomberg story have generated a few questions and I appreciate the chance to provide some context. I understand how my remark may have come across the wrong way. The point I tried to make in the story is that everyone in our industry is trying to scale a mountain and get there faster than the competition. Some carriers have a much easier time doing so, primarily because they have more competitive costs. At AA, our labor costs are significantly higher than our competitors, which puts us at a disadvantage and makes it more difficult to get ahead. That slows our progress and holds us all back. Not just the company, everyone at AA. So we are forced to work harder than everyone else just to keep up. Over the long haul, that’s an unsustainable situation.
I firmly believe our employees are our core strength. That’s why we keep more maintenance in house than any other network carrier, invest in a wide range of important training and development initiatives and partner with employees to improve in areas such as customer service and operational dependability. I appreciate you sharing your thoughts and everything you do to take care of our customers.
Sincerely,
Jeff Brundage