Posted on 10/16/2002 5:34:57 AM PDT by GaltMeister
A year ago this week Jim Goodwin, the former chief executive of United Airlines, wrote a letter to employees warning that "we are in nothing less than a fight for our life".
"Clearly this bleeding has to be stopped - and soon - or United will perish sometime next year," he said. The thanks he got for this letter was to be marched swiftly out of the company.
The message outraged union leaders, who dubbed it the "Chicken Little letter" for its alarmist tone, and caused UAL's stock price to drop 10 per cent to about $17 at the time.
Looking back, Mr Goodwin could be forgiven for feeling an element of Schadenfreude. While wrong about the timing of United's meltdown, the rest of his critique has proved spot on. United's shares have since plunged to $1.72, valuing the 76-year-old company at $98m, one-fourteenth the size of Jet Blue, an airline start-up founded three years ago.
Unfortunately for United, some employees, who hold 55 per cent of the company, remain unwilling to embrace financial reality. Last week, after a period of lengthy talks on wage cuts as part of a coalition of United's unions, the International Association of Machinists broke away and said it would negotiate any deal separately.
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Quite a problem - the unions running the company, looking only to their own interest while the company (their livelyhood) goes down in flames.
It was not so long ago that United and Delta were considered to be the premier air carriers.
You can have a company without a union but you cant have a union without a co.
They never learn.
They are going to, in a way. Resistance to the reality of the situation had lead to the union rallying cry - "Full pay to the last day!!!"
Somehow I own $2,000 face of 9% United bonds, Due 12/03. Right now the market has them going for twenty cents on the dollar. At this rate we'll get zero.
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