General terms are available, but I don't think the "nuts and bolts" are available.
I found a few details, and the merger clause is actually pretty good. If NWA merges with another carrier, they could remove the 17 planes they gave is when the ASA was signed (no great loss.....they're already going to Mesaba) plus another 24. Except now they really can't. See, according to the ASA, after NWA emerged from bankruptcy, they lost that ability. It was a clause in there to keep us from having the rug totally yanked out from under us if someone bought NWA for pennies on the dollar when they were in bankruptcy. Now that they've emerged, that clause that allows them to pull the 24 planes is void.
Another thing the article says is that some performance formulas were re-written in NWA's favor. Now, THAT could be their "out" when it comes down to it. No doubt, the pilots will get the blame if that happens. "Those greedy pilots could have stopped this if they had just settled for our mediocre.....er, industry....standard, yeah, that's it....contract." They already love to point the finger at us for "losing" the 17 airplanes, the 76 seaters and another contract with another airline. Well, the 17 planes and the 76 seaters were probably going to Mesaba anyway, and WHAT other contract?
If you read between the lines in the article, you can sorta see how PCL gets their $$$ from NWA.
The Amended ASA will provide for Pinnacle to charge Northwest current market rates for regional airline services.
Translation: as long as what NWA is charged is more or less average for what other carriers charge, they can pay it. What that means to me is if the pilots straight up voted an industry average contract.....PCL's operating expense would increase ZERO. Why? The cost would get funneled to NWA since it was still be on par with industry average. Oh, yeah. NWA also pays for fuel. Then there's this:
Pinnacle's target margin rate will be reduced from 10.0% to 8.0%
So, basically, NWA pays Pinnacle cost + 8.0%. Now, the kicker is the performance issues. If we don't meet performance targets, we have to pay penalities. That could erase that 8% pretty quickly, which is why our stock is in the toilet right now. But, assuming we meet all performance targets with NWA, it's almost a guaranteed 8% profit margin. Seems to me they'd be willing to take a 1-2% hit on that 8% to get the pilots on their side to maximize the odds of hitting those targets. Instead, we're seeing performance fall b/c most guys are tired of doing everyone else's jobs to keep the operation running smoothly.....
NWA agreement runs until 2017, and it's currently for 124 airplanes (that's after taking out the 17 destined for Mesaba).
The Delta deal is also for 10 years for 16 airframes, but I can't find ANY details on that one.
PCL, yeah. JB is teaching upgrade.