BLOOMINGTON, Minn. -- Unions at Mesaba Aviation Inc. said Monday they have approved new concessionary contracts with the bankrupt airline, a Northwest Airlines feeder. þþAbout 1,100 pilots, flight attendants and mechanics are covered by the contracts, which took nearly a year to reach and brought the unions to the brink of a strike. þþMesaba said it needed the labor deals to continue handling regional flying for Northwest Airlines Corp., which also is operating in bankruptcy. Mesaba earlier got permission from a bankruptcy judge to impose cuts amounting to 17.5 percent of pay and benefits on the union, but held off as the two sides continued bargaining. þþUnion leaders said they weren't happy with the deal, but that it was necessary to keep Mesaba flying and preserve jobs for their members. They said the cuts could have been deeper. In the end, their concessions in wages and benefits added up to about 15.8 percent. þþÿI wouldn't say it's a victory,ÿ said Tom Wychor, head of the Air Line Pilots Association unit at Mesaba. ÿWe gave concessions in order to save the company.ÿ þþThe pilots accepted the agreement with roughly 68 percent of the vote. Eighty-two percent of flight attendants voting approved it, and 65 percent of mechanics did. þþStarting Friday, flight attendants' wages will drop 2.7 percent; pilots between 5 and 5.5 percent, depending on what kind of plane they fly. Mechanics will take an 8.5 percent pay cut. þþThe average Mesaba flight attendant was making about $24,000 a year, pilots were averaging about $45,000 and mechanics with five years' experience were earning about $37,000. þþThe contracts will last between four and five-and-a-half years, depending on Mesaba's growth. If the airline does well, employees could recoup some of what they gave up. þþWychor said the airline came ÿextremely closeÿ to liquidating. ÿPersonally, I was planning on figuring out how to afford Christmas presents,ÿ he said. þþMesaba's management issued a statement saying the agreements were necessary to emerge from bankruptcy. þþÿThe pilots, flight attendants, and mechanics along with every single Mesaba employee, are making a considerable sacrifice to ensure the survival of this company and I am confident we will see brighter days ahead,ÿ John Spanjers, the airline's president and chief operating officer, said in the statement. þþNorthwest issued a statement saying it was pleased with the agreements. þþMesaba flies to 88 cities, funneling passengers into Northwest hubs in Detroit, Minneapolis and Memphis. Its fleet once numbered about 100 planes, including regional jets, but Northwest has reduced that to 49 prop-driven Saab aircraft. þ
Source: Chicago Tribune