Bob, I'm amazed at how you can look at the economy, AMR's quarterly loss, and say that the company can afford "restore and more". We obviously have very different views on what reality is in the industry.
And how many years have you been in the industry? I've been in it for 28 years. I've seen this before.
The "cry poverty song" is nothing new and its not unique to this industry either.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x77mKCnHhYM
I like the line in part 2 1:50 where Quill says that "
After 12 days (of a strike on the Pennsylvania Rialroad) they found all the things they couldnt find in the three years before the strike". Then later in part 3 6:15 on the Transit Authority "
They could always find money the day after the strike but they could never find it before the strike. Where were they hiding it?"
Is the economy in turmoil? Yes, but the airlines have already gone through their recession, they have already leaned out and the planes are still full. With the announced capacity cuts they are likely to remain full. If the planes empty out the airlines can always once again request to reopen the contract under the threat of bankruptcy so if they really cant afford it they have a way out. If we sign a bad deal and all of a sudden the company has yet another miraculous turnaround, as we have seen EVERY TIME we gave them a concessionary deal in the past, we are stuck with the deal.
There are already 24100 less of us at AA, thats a 25% decline but revenues did not decline, in fact they increased by around $6billion. OK for 2008 Fuel ate up $3 billion, thats according to Arpeys news release, so what happened to the other $3 billion in additional revenue, plus the $1.5 billion(minimum) that the elimination of 24100 jobs is worth plus the $1.8 billion in concessions that the workers who remain gave up?
So even after accounting for the additional $3 billion in fuel AA had over $6 billion more to work with than they had in 2003, (fully restoring our compensation would only take a quarter of that windfall). The question is where did all those extra billions go? Much of it went to the banks as AA slashed their debt in half(my debt coincidentally doubled over the last five years).
The fact is that the company could fully restore our wages and not even touch the additional revenue that they brought in, they may not be able to prepay down their debts or buy as many new airplanes as they planed but its about time that the "Shared pain" actually became "shared".As we can see from the nearly $9 billion (before fuel) windfall and the PUPs the pain has been delt to the workers only. Now with the price of fuel plummeting they stand to have billions more to play with, sure ticket sales may decline as the economy sinks into recession but like I said if we get a deal that the company cant afford they always have a way out, we dont.
Look at it this way, its the company's patriotic duty to pay us more because the money they pay us will allow us to purchase the goods and services of others which will help drive up demand, job growth and prosperity for all.