Little History Review:
Northwest and Delta
executives to make millions from bankruptcies
By Jerry Isaacs
19 September 2005
19 September 2005
Over the last several
years the top corporate executives at Northwest and Delta airlines negotiated
retirement packages guaranteeing them millions in the event the companies
declared bankruptcy and defaulted on their pension payments to employees. Both
companies filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last Wednesday, in large
measure to escape their pension obligations and seek the bankruptcy court’s
backing for sweeping cuts in airline workers’ jobs, wages and benefits.
Since 2000, Delta has
lost $10 billion, slashed 23,000 jobs and cut pay for pilots, managers and
other employees. Three years ago the company spent more than $44 million
setting up trusts to protect executives’ pension benefits from creditors in
case of bankruptcy, saying the perk was needed to retain executives in hard times.
Because transferring money to bankruptcy-proof trusts typically triggers big
tax bills for the executives, Delta inflated the amounts to compensate for the
extra taxes.
Retiring CEO Leo
Mullin, who was paid $13 million in compensation in 2001, was given 22 years of
instant seniority—although he worked for Delta for only five-and-half
years—boosting his retirement package to $16 million. While incoming CEO Gerald
Grinstein took a ceremonial pay reduction to bolster the company’s demands for
sweeping employee wage and pension cuts, behind the scenes other executives
were cashing in on the benefits of their golden parachutes.
Former CEO Ronald
Allen, who was forced out in 1997, continued to draw $500,000 a year from Delta
for consulting services up until 2005, although neither the company nor Allen
would say whether he ever provided any such services. Allen’s exit package also
included a $4.5 million cash severance payment and a $765,000-a-year pension
that continues. He also got 10 years’ worth of perks, such as a
2,090-square-foot Buckhead, Georgia office, a car and club memberships provided
by Delta.
When Northwest
Airlines CEO Richard Anderson left the company last year, he took his pension
in a lump-sum payment of $3,028,700. Anderson’s check covered three separate
pensions he received from Northwest: the regular pension plan, his excess
pension plan and his supplemental executive retirement plan, or SERP. Other top
executives at Northwest, including current CEO Doug Steenland, also were
guaranteed three pensions.
Union workers at
Northwest have a pension plan based on years of service. For mechanics,
custodians and cleaners—currently on strike against Northwest’s demands for the
elimination of more than half their jobs and the replacement of traditional
guaranteed pensions with 401(k) plans—that amounts to $85 a month for every
year they work. According to the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Association
(AMFA), a mechanic who retires at 65, after 40 years at Northwest, will collect
about $40,000 a year.
The company’s 2005
proxy statement indicated that CEO Steenland will receive $947,417 a year if he
retires at 65. Delta’s “supplemental plan” adds multipliers to boost the
pensions of the company’s four top executives, crediting Steenland with 15
years of service for every five he works and paying him pension credits at
twice the rate applied to regular salaried workers.
The company’s four
top executives—Steenland and executive vice presidents Tim Griffin, Phillip
Haan and Andrew Roberts—will receive a total of $2,476,100 in annual pension
benefits. This is enough to fund the pensions of 90 flight attendants with
comparable years of service.
In addition to their
pension benefits, Northwest’s top five executives (the above-mentioned, plus
Executive Vice President and General Counsel Barry Simon) have taken in
$32,000,721 in compensation since 2002, not including other perks such as
lifetime health-care coverage and travel benefits. The five also sold more than
$1 million worth of stock in the months leading up to the bankruptcy
announcement, as did big investors, like professional financier and former NWA
Board of Directors member Al Checchi, who sold 1,650,240 shares from April 23
to May 3, raking in $8,439,884.
The New York Times
reported Thursday that the timing of Northwest’s bankruptcy filing allowed the
company to protect its assets while executives reneged on a payment of $65
million into the employee pension fund, which is already underfunded by $3.8
billion. If Northwest skipped the payment before filing for bankruptcy, it
would have been in violation of federal pension laws, and the government-run
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) could have placed a lien on the
airline’s assets, giving itself a better chance of recovering some of the
money.
Instead, the
newspaper noted, “[S]ince Northwest filed for bankruptcy first, then skipped
the pension contribution, the government has no legal power to place a lien on
its assets. It makes the pension guarantor—and the employees and retirees whose
interests the government represents—into unsecured creditors for the $65
million. Unsecured creditors generally fare poorly in bankruptcy, recovering
just pennies for every dollar they are owed.”
If the PBGC takes
over Northwest’s pension plans pilots would suffer the loss of half or more of
their pensions because the PBGC caps payments at $45,613 a year for plans
canceled in 2005. Other unionized workers could also see drastic reductions.
Northwest also wants
to freeze its current defined benefit pension plans and switch to defined
contribution plans, such as 401(k)s, which are cheaper for employers but don’t
provide workers the guaranteed benefits of traditional pensions.
Delta’s pension funds
are in even worse shape. If the company defaults on its obligations it would
set a record, surpassing the size of the United Airlines pension collapse
earlier this year, and further staggering the overburdened pension guarantee
board. According to board officials, Delta’s pension plan has promised benefits
worth $17.5 billion, but it only has $6.9 billion in assets. With its
bankruptcy filing the company is expected to press for even more drastic cuts
than it outlined in its corporate restructuring plan last year, when it
announced plans to cut $5 billion and 7,000 jobs by next year.
The looting of
airline workers’ pension funds is but one example of how the assets of the
major airlines have been squandered over the last several decades to enrich the
airline bosses and big investors. It also underscores the widespread parasitism
that pervades the boardrooms of corporate America.
The top personnel of
the airline industry are chosen—and highly compensated—not because of their
ability to manage complex organizations or to lay out a long-term corporate
strategy. Instead a definite social type has risen to the top, whose only
qualifications are its acuity for slashing tens of thousands of jobs and
guaranteeing the quickest and largest payoffs to Wall Street.
Northwest’s CEO
Steenland began his career working for the Office of General Counsel for the
secretary of the Department of Transportation when the Democratic
administration of President Jimmy Carter was preparing the deregulation of the
airline industry. He later joined a top law firm in Washington DC, which
represented Pan American Air Lines during the merger frenzy that preceded the
company’s bankruptcy declaration, and later represented an investor group that
organized the leveraged buyout of Northwest Airlines in 1989.
Steenland is
particular adept at working the halls of Congress to lift regulations on
pension funding and any other restrictions on profit-making, and at making use
of the services of the labor bureaucracy to cut labor costs. “Since the biggest
input is the wages, salaries, and benefits line, this puts a lot of attention
on working with our employees in knowing what we need to do to survive in the
long term,” he commented.
Last year, in the
midst of concession talks with the pilots union, Steenland hired Barry Simon as
the company’s executive vice president and general counsel. Simon was a top
executive in the Seabury Group, a New York consulting firm whose
“restructuring” clients have included Air Canada, US Airways, America West
Airlines and Continental.
Simon earned his
credentials as an executive at Continental and Eastern airlines, where he
served under corporate raider and union-buster Frank Lorenzo. In 1983
Continental filed for bankruptcy—despite the airline’s $60 million in cash
reserves—in order to exploit a provision in the Bankruptcy Code allowing Lorenzo
to abrogate his contracts with the unions. Simon directed Continental’s legal
strategy when it emerged from bankruptcy a second time in 1991.
Simon also played a
leading role in the bankruptcy of Eastern Airlines, which stopped flying in
1991 following the bitter strike by unionized mechanics. At the time, Lorenzo
and his team stripped the airline of valuable assets and sold them at fire-sale
prices to Continental.
The 1980s and 1990s
saw the emergence of junk-bond dealers and corporate raiders in the airline
industry like Lorenzo and Carl Icahn (who bankrupted Trans World Airlines,
among others, and who is now worth $5.8 billion—no. 55 on the list of the
world’s richest people).
Today, after nearly a
quarter of a century of betrayals by the trade union bureaucracy (from the
striking air traffic controllers in 1981 to the present scabbing organized by
the airline unions against the striking Northwest mechanics), the corporate
executives running the airlines feel even less restraint than their
predecessors did when slashing workers’ jobs, wages and benefits and looting
company assets to enrich themselves.
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