Source:
examiner.com Marc Friedman
With a crucial vote coming up soon, the union representing former Northwest Airlines cabin crew has fired a shot across the bow at Delta Air Lines. Alledging that the airline is breaking the contract it currently has in place with the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA which still represents the former NWA staff, the union filed a federal lawsuit in Washington claiming that Delta isn't honoring numerous aspects of the contract.
Specifically, the AFA says that its members are required to have more than two days off after working long international flights, but that Delta is putting them back on the line after just 11 hours. The union also charged that the Atlanta-based airline is meeting with groups of flight attendants that have been chosen without union participation, as well as not resolving flight attendant grievances.
Delta has responded by saying, "We believe this lawsuit has no merit and can only presume it is meant to divide flight attendants and distract them from the upcoming representation election." The former Northwest attendants who number 7,000 are still in the union, but Delta's cabin crew are not represented by a union. The expected election in the near future will determine if the combined carrier's flight attendants, 20,000 in total, will have union representation moving forward. Assuming the 7,000 former NWA union members vote to continue with their AFA-CWA affiliation, it would take just over 3,000 of the 13,000 Delta flight attendants voting in favor to unionize all of the cabin crew staff.
Delta finalized its purchase of Twin Cities-based Northwest Airlines in December of 2008.
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