Chief executives of two bankrupt airlines warned House and Senate negotiators
on Wednesday, July 19, that failure to include airline relief in pension reform
legislation would force them to terminate their defined-benefit plans.
Delta Air Lines CEO Gerald Grinstein and Northwest Airlines president and CEO
Douglas Steenland say that they are trying to maintain their frozen pension
systems while reorganizing their companies.
But they assert that Congress must allow them a longer timeline to return
their plans to 100 percent funding.
"We're at the tipping point," Grinstein said at a Capitol Hill press
conference. "We have to know very soon whether we're going to get this
legislation."
In a letter to Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Georgia, both airlines argue that
"catch-up" payments that are required under current law for underfunded pensions
threaten "our companies' viability and our ability to exit from bankruptcy."
The Senate approved pension reform legislation in November that would give
the airlines 20 years to shore up their pension plans. The House pension bill
does not include a similar provision. Other companies would have seven years to
fund 100 percent of their pension promises.
A conference committee that was formed in March to reconcile the measures has
missed several self-imposed deadlines. Delta and Northwest are urging
legislators to reach an agreement before the August congressional recess.
The conference might meet that goal. One prominent senator nixed his meeting
on Wednesday with Grinstein and Steenland so that he could remain in
negotiations.
If Congress gives the airlines more breathing room, "we can preserve the
frozen defined-benefit plans, a very significant accomplishment," Steenland
says. "A further delay is the moral equivalent of 'no.' "
Without help, Delta and Northwest say they would have to dump pensions
affecting more than 150,000 employees and retirees onto the federal Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corp. US Airways and United Airlines have already made that
move, contributing to the PBGC's nearly $23 billion deficit. The Bush
administration estimates that U.S. pensions are underfunded by $450 billion.
The complex pension reform legislation deals with funding rules, cash-balance
plans, investment advice, tax reform and other issues.
"The airline provision is driving this conference," says Sen. Norm Coleman,
R-Minnesota.
As an example of that momentum, Northwest chartered two planes to bring 225
employees to Capitol Hill on July 18. They conducted about 100 meetings with
members of Congress and staff. The lobbying partnership between airline
management and unions contrasts with sometimes tense relations during bankruptcy
negotiations. After the Capitol Hill press conference, Grinstein, Steenland and
union officials huddled for about 10 minutes.
"We appreciate both the CEO's contribution to pension legislation along with
Sens. Isakson and Coleman," says Capt. Dave Stevens, chairman of the Northwest
pilots union.
As the conference committee commenced in March, the White House threatened to
veto reform that it deemed too weak. But Isakson asserted that the Bush
administration would acquiesce to giving the airlines a break.
"The White House will sign the bill," Isakson says.
Another potential airline opponent, House Majority Leader John Boehner,
R-Ohio, seems to be leaning toward the airline position.
"I have been supportive of reasonable and responsible relief for troubled
industries for some time," he says.
--Mark Schoeff Jr.