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US Airways
Ends With You
Opinion · September 13, 2004
So long, US Airways.
Now that the nation's seventh-largest carrier has filed for bankruptcy
protection a second time in as many years, many industry-watchers give
it only a few months before it liquidates.
Even David Bronner recently predicted it wouldn't be saved from Chapter
11, and he ought to know. He's the airline's chairman.
But while most of the pundits are fixated on the reasons for US Airways'
likely demise, one question has gone largely unasked: Who is going to
pay for this failure?
Certainly, its employees will.
Since 2001, the company's rank-and-file workers have given up an unprecedented
$1.9 billion in wages and benefits - reductions they willingly accepted
in order to keep US Airways flying. When the airline goes belly-up, these
loyal employees will also pay with their jobs.
But they aren't alone. You'll pay, too.
Let's start with the big number: $1 billion. That's how much money US
Airways borrowed last year, supported by a $900 million federal loan guarantee,
according to the Department of the Treasury. Although part of the loan
has been repaid, the airline recently warned that it might default on
the rest of it, according to a filing made with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Guess who gets stuck with the bill when US Airways goes belly-up? If you
pay taxes, you will.
Here's another number to ponder: $264 million. That's the amount of aid
the federal government gave US Airways after the Sept. 11 attacks as compensation
for "direct and incremental losses incurred," according to the airline.
(True, US Airways made less money when Washington's airports were slow
to re-open, but the airline didn't lose any planes on 9/11.)
It would be one thing if the government subsidies had actually helped
the carrier recover from the terrorist attacks. The amount was far too
generous for that. Instead, it just subsidized an unprofitable airline
and postponed the carrier's inevitable demise.
Who paid for the botched government bailout of US Airways? You did.
One more number to consider: $240 million. That's what the Retirement
Systems of Alabama, the pension fund for Alabama's teachers and state
employees, paid for a 37 percent stake in US Airways in 2002, an investment
that helped the airline emerge from bankruptcy the last time.
That stake was reportedly valued at less than half that amount just before
the airline filed for its latest bankruptcy protection. If the carrier
folds, it will probably be all but worthless.
Guess who foots the bill for that? Sure, Alabama's public employees do.
But indirectly, so do the people who paid their salaries.
And if you live in Alabama, that would be - you guessed it - you.
Speaking of pensions, let's not forget US Airways' own retirement issues.
The carrier recently asked for government permission to stretch out about
$68 million in contributions it owes to its pensions over the next five
years instead of the next 18 months. That would be a best-case scenario,
actually. What if US Airways defaulted on its pensions - as United Airlines
recently threatened to do - and then went under?
The government's Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. insures that retirement
money. Actually, you do.
Remember the carrier's jingle, "USAir begins with you"? Now it looks as
if US Airways actually might end with you - with you paying for
its complete failure to operate a competitive business.
As America's travelers and taxpayers watch US Airways slowly die during
the coming months, they should pay less attention to the pontifications
of the analysts and the spin of the publicists, and more attention to
who is going to be left to clean up this mess.
Who is going to cover the loan losses? Who will pay for the bailout that
didn't work? And what about the 27,848 suddenly-jobless airline workers
who will be applying for unemployment benefits? Who's going to pay up?
You.
Christopher
Elliott is a travel commentator. All e-mailed questions may be edited,
condensed or republished at the site's discretion.
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