Northwest Says It's Prepared For Strike
Airline Taking Tough Stance With Mechanics
By Keith L. Alexander
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, August 19, 2005; Page D01
In the heat of a labor confrontation, Northwest Airlines Corp. last month took the unusual step of asking that President Bush not intervene to avert a strike by its mechanics.
The airline said it was well prepared to ensure normal operations even if the 4,400 union workers stopped working in protest of proposed job and pay cuts. The nation's fourth-largest carrier worked 14 months to have replacement workers ready to move into place.
The airline's request of the president sent another message: Northwest was prepared to endure a strike, even risk bankruptcy, to guarantee that it would be able to pay its workers less in the future than it does today. The airline's survival depended on it, executives reckoned.
With or without a strike, Northwest's strategy in its battle with its mechanics sends a message that financially strapped airlines are willing to resort to increasingly dire measures to cut costs in a highly competitive industry, labor analysts and union officials said. It also underscores the weakening of the airlines' unions, once a powerful and dominant force in the industry.
"If a corporation can eliminate an entire workforce and bring in replacement workers, it has ramifications for every other unionized company. That's what's at stake," said Steve MacFarlane, the mechanics union spokesman....
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