Tim
New Member
Grinstein also said that Delta has no plans to ask its pilots for a third pay cut, and he dismissed the idea, at least for now, that the bankrupt company could merge with another carrier.
Grinstein said the $280-million-a-year concessions agreement that pilots and the bankruptcy court approved Wednesday gives the airline the cost cuts it needs.
"I don't expect to go back to the pilots," Grinstein said. "We have all our people at the market rate. We are going to have to be more efficient both in the way we operate the airline but also in what can be recouped in revenue management, handling the network and utilization of our equipment."
The airline's chief financial officer, Edward Bastian, had been noncommittal when asked in March by AP whether the company might seek a third pay cut from pilots.
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I believe those words are the same ones he used when the company asked for the cuts and got them the first time from the pilots and the rest of the company. Low and behold less than a year later they wanted more again.
Grinstein said the $280-million-a-year concessions agreement that pilots and the bankruptcy court approved Wednesday gives the airline the cost cuts it needs.
"I don't expect to go back to the pilots," Grinstein said. "We have all our people at the market rate. We are going to have to be more efficient both in the way we operate the airline but also in what can be recouped in revenue management, handling the network and utilization of our equipment."
The airline's chief financial officer, Edward Bastian, had been noncommittal when asked in March by AP whether the company might seek a third pay cut from pilots.
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I believe those words are the same ones he used when the company asked for the cuts and got them the first time from the pilots and the rest of the company. Low and behold less than a year later they wanted more again.