Business » News Thursday, November 04, 2004
Mediators press UPS, pilots
Union says company UPS is outsourcing work
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By Bill Wolfe
bwolfe@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
Federal mediators have asked UPS and its pilots union to agree to a contract by the end of March. But a new wrinkle — pilot concerns about what it considers outsourcing of flights to a Chinese carrier — has entered the talks.
Linda Puchala and John Livingood of the National Mediation Board are "trying to bring pressure on both sides to try to get us moving to a conclusion, which we are thrilled about," said Independent Pilots Association spokesman Brian Gaudet.
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Last we knew
Contract talks between UPS and its pilots union, the Independent Pilots Association, have been under way since November 2002 and went under federal mediation in August.
The latest
Mediators have asked the two sides to reach a final agreement by the end of March. But pilots are voicing new concerns over what they consider outsourcing of flights to a Chinese carrier.
Why it's news
UPS Airlines and the 2,500-member IPA are based in Louisville.
For more info
www.ipapilot.org;
www.ups.com
Four days of talks conclude today, and negotiations resume Dec. 13-16. Additional sessions are planned for Jan. 10-13, Feb. 14-17 and March 14-17, said UPS spokesman Mark Giuffre in Louisville.
Talks have been under way since November 2002. Mediation began in August after the two sides were unable to reach agreement. So far, talks have included issues such as scheduling, training, facilities and vacation. Discussions have not focused yet on pay and other economic issues.
There is no imminent danger of a strike because of U.S. laws that govern airline contracts. The contract does not expire until the negotiating processes under the Railway Labor Act are exhausted.
"We've made good progress throughout this time," Giuffre said, but the mediators "control the schedule. We certainly think it's good to set a goal and say, `OK, here's what we're shooting for.'"
A portion of the contract called scope — defining what work and flights should belong to IPA pilots — has become "absolutely the No. 1 one issue for us," Gaudet said. "I think scheduling has even been trumped."
The pilots union ran a full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal Oct. 25 accusing UPS of outsourcing flights because its logistics arm, Supply Chain Solutions, uses a China Airlines flight six nights a week to move air freight from Penang, Malaysia, to Taipei, Taiwan, then on to Anchorage, Alaska, and Nashville, Tenn.
Giuffre said the flights — added to fill a contract with Supply Chain Solutions to bring in computer parts for Dell — don't constitute outsourcing. UPS always tries to use its own people and equipment to move goods, but didn't have the air rights or the planes available to run the route, he said.
The pilots contend that arrangements could have been made to ship the parts by UPS. "Clearly it's a violation of our contract," said Gaudet, arguing that UPS and any of its affiliate companies must use IPA pilots.
The disagreement has been voiced in negotiations, and "it's changed the dynamics. That's really all I can say about it," Gaudet said.
Giuffre said the China Airlines issue should not delay a contract agreement. "This is nothing new. Scope is one of the five major issues" in the contract "and we've talked about this issue months ago."