|
|
|
|
|
|
Thur
Outsourcing Ban Upheld
at US Airways The airline was seeking an emergency stay of an Oct. 21 preliminary injunction that halted maintenance work on two US Airways aircraft and barred any additional work by employees at a foreign owned facility in Mobile, Alabama. The stay, if granted, would have allowed US Airways to continue outsourcing the work while the appeals process went forward. “We are gratified by the court’s decision, but at the same time we are dismayed with the lack of action by US Airways to have this work performed in-house,” said GVP Robert Roach, Jr. “The preliminary injunction was issued 15 days ago, yet the airline has not taken any steps to perform the work with US Airways employees.” The IAM filed suit against US Airways in October after the carrier signed a contract with Singapore Mobile Aerospace Engineering to perform heavy maintenance on ten of its Airbus 319 aircraft. The case was heard by a district court in Pennsylvania, who ruled the work could not be outsourced and belonged to IAM-represented US Airways employees. The IAM is also seeking damages for the work performed by subcontractors before it was halted by the injunction.
Southwest to Close Reservations Centers “Closing reservations centers is a stark departure from historical Southwest Airlines operations,” said William O’Driscoll, District 142 president and directing general chairman. “As we addressed in a recent mailing to all IAM members at Southwest Airlines, new technologies such as Internet booking and check-in, call forwarding and self-service kiosks pose a real and immediate threat to jobs. That threat of increased productivity through technology is now affecting Southwest employees for the first time.”
The workers at
Southwest will join more than 200,000 airline employees who lost their
jobs or were forced to relocate during the past two years. Southwest and
Alaska Airlines were the only U.S. carriers that did not lay off employees
in travel meltdown that followed the September 11 attacks.
Seniors
Launch TV Ads On Medicare Plan “Millions of retirees could lose their existing employer-provided health care coverage,” warns Alliance President George J. Kourpias. Under the proposed legislation, he explained, “seniors could lose thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket expenses. The big winners are the drug firms.”
Seniors can make their
voices heard by calling their elected representatives toll-free at
1-800-511-3802 and asking them to vote “NO” on this proposed legislation
or by visiting the Alliance website at
www.retiredamericans.org and sending a letter to their senators and
representatives, says Ruben Burks, Alliance secretary-treasurer, who
reminds older Americans that “no bill is better than a bad bill.” |