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JUDGE ORDERS PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS TO STOP SHIFTING FLIGHTS TO SUBSIDIARY
A federal judge orders Pan American Airways Corp. to stop moving its flights to its nonunion subsidiary, Boston-Maine Airways Corp., finding that the practice is "a direct attempt to destroy a union" (Air Line Pilots Association, Int'l v. Guilford Transp. Indus. Inc., D. N.H.,No. 04-331-JD, 10/13/04). The ruling by Judge DiClerico in favor of the Air Line Pilots Association adopts a recommendation issued last month by a federal magistrate judge that Pan American had set up Boston-Maine Airways Corp. in its bid to permanently replace its unionized operations with nonunion workers.
Pan Am has "no legitimate business purpose" for shifting the routes from one carrier to the other, DiClerico finds. He cites as persuasive the testimony of one witness that company President David Fink said there would be "smooth sailing as soon as they got rid of all those union jackasses." An attorney for the airlines says they have filed a notice of appeal with the First Circuit. The court orders Pan Am to restore the pay, rules, and working conditions in effect at the carrier before July 2004; to refrain from letting Boston-Maine use large Boeing 727 aircraft normally flown by Pan Am; and to efrain from transferring aircraft to Boston-Maine. . . .
JUDGE ORDERS PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS TO STOP SHIFTING FLIGHTS TO SUBSIDIARY
A federal judge orders Pan American Airways Corp. to stop moving its flights to its nonunion subsidiary, Boston-Maine Airways Corp., finding that the practice is "a direct attempt to destroy a union" (Air Line Pilots Association, Int'l v. Guilford Transp. Indus. Inc., D. N.H.,No. 04-331-JD, 10/13/04). The ruling by Judge DiClerico in favor of the Air Line Pilots Association adopts a recommendation issued last month by a federal magistrate judge that Pan American had set up Boston-Maine Airways Corp. in its bid to permanently replace its unionized operations with nonunion workers.
Pan Am has "no legitimate business purpose" for shifting the routes from one carrier to the other, DiClerico finds. He cites as persuasive the testimony of one witness that company President David Fink said there would be "smooth sailing as soon as they got rid of all those union jackasses." An attorney for the airlines says they have filed a notice of appeal with the First Circuit. The court orders Pan Am to restore the pay, rules, and working conditions in effect at the carrier before July 2004; to refrain from letting Boston-Maine use large Boeing 727 aircraft normally flown by Pan Am; and to efrain from transferring aircraft to Boston-Maine. . . .