Tag Archives: N586NK

Spirit Airlines’ pilots pushes back at management

Spirit Airlines’ (Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood) striking pilots, represented by ALPA, issued this statement stating management is distorting the facts of the proposed contract.

Here is the full press release:

Spirit Airlines management continues to seriously misrepresent its latest pilot contract proposal, which would force pilots to work more hours and pay more to provide health care for their families, while company profits continue to soar and Spirit was ranked as the most profitable U.S. airline by pre-tax profit margin last year.

โ€œWe regret that Spirit managementโ€™s failure to take seriously its pilotsโ€™ contributions to the company has forced us to strike, but, one way or another, we will make our value clear,โ€ said Capt. Andy Nelson, vice-chairman of the Spirit pilotsโ€™ unit of the Air Line Pilots Association, Intโ€™l (ALPA). โ€œFor the sake of the passengers who have been inconvenienced by this situation, we urge Spirit management to get serious and present a contract proposal that is fair and equitable for all of its pilots.

โ€œMoreover, Spirit management should focus its energy at the bargaining table instead of negotiating in the news media,โ€ continued Nelson. โ€œManagement has hampered our efforts to develop a deal by waiting until hours before the strike deadline to offer any contract increases at all.โ€

Managementโ€™s latest proposal is worth $62.5 million over five years, while Spirit earned a record $83 million profit in 2009 alone. Spiritโ€™s ranking as the most profitable airline by pre-tax margin in the United States in 2009 is based on the Department of Transportationโ€™s Form 41 data. Pre-tax margin, which is the profit made by a company calculated as a percentage of sales before taxes, is an important measure of the profitability of a company.

In the context of this strong profitability, managementโ€™s proposal would not bring Spirit pilotsโ€™ salaries up to industry standards for at least five years. The pilotsโ€™ pay has been frozen for almost four years, which would mean the pilots would wait a total of nearly nine years under managementโ€™s proposal before their salaries would match those of other pilots who fly similar aircraft elsewhere in the industry. The management proposal would also force pilots to work more hours and pay more for health care.

โ€œWeโ€™ve witnessed massive support from Spirit pilots, pilots at other airlines, and labor across the industry,โ€ said Capt. John Prater, ALPAโ€™s president. โ€œSpirit management should recognize that its pilots have powerful backing and an unshakable resolve to get a fair contract.โ€

โ€œWe were in talks with management and federal mediators for almost three years and in negotiations for nearly four years, yet management produced a serious proposal only in the final hours of negotiations at 3:00 a.m.,โ€ said Nelson. โ€œThis company has made record profits based in large part on the professionalism of its employees. Itโ€™s time they gave back to the workers, who have given so much to the company, with a fair contract that brings our pilots up to industry-standard pay and benefits.โ€

Copyright Photo: Bruce Drum. A picture from the past, Airbus A321-231 N586NK (msn 1794) taxies to the active runway at Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood in the blue version of the 2002 livery.