Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Monday, May 13
The Indiana Daily Student

world

United files for bankruptcy

Airline makes largest filing in history of aviation

CHICAGO -- United Airlines made the largest bankruptcy filing in aviation history Monday, saying it was the only way to keep the world's No. 2 airline flying after two years of heavy losses. \nThe Chapter 11 filing was the sixth-largest ever as measured by assets. The suburban Chicago-based company has lost $4 billion in the last two years due to a slumping economy, flawed business strategies and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. It faced debt payments of $875 million later this week. \n"We're in control of United's destiny,'' United CEO Glenn Tilton said in a telephone interview. "We've made a good decision for United. It is in fact Chapter 1. ... This is a tremendous opportunity for United to transform this company and to emerge stronger than ever." \nTilton told customers and employees at O'Hare International Airport that the carrier would keep flying. "We are now going to take this occasion to create a new beginning for United," he said. \nTilton said he expects the bankruptcy process to be completed within 18 months. \nAt a bankruptcy hearing at 7 a.m., Chief Judge Eugene R. Wedoff issued orders allowing United to keep operating until another hearing Monday when he is to issue further orders allowing the airline to continue its operations. \nUnited said it obtained $1.5 billion in financing from several banks to continue operating. The airline said it has $800 million cash on hand. \nJames Sprayregen, an attorney for United, told Wedoff that the company was losing between $20 million and $22 million a day this month and desperately needed to cut costs. The company and a coalition of union leaders were scheduled to meet Tuesday to begin talks about reducing costs. \nThe airline has promised to keep flying while it sheds costs under the auspices of a bankruptcy judge and overhauls its business plan to try to become profitable again. As of Monday's filing, United had assets of $22.8 billion and liabilities of $21.2 billion, the company said. \nUnited operates about 1,700 flights a day, or about 20 percent of all U.S. flights. It has the most extensive worldwide route structure of any airline. \nThe bankruptcy filing will come at a steep price for the 83,000 employees who own 55 percent of the company. A bankruptcy court judge is almost certain to order wage and job cuts and could dissolve the employee stock ownership plan. \nTwo of United's unions, the Air Line Pilots Association and the Association of Flight Attendants, said both sides must work together during restructuring. \n"Any successful restructuring of United in bankruptcy must involve continued cooperation and collaboration among ALPA, United management and all of the company's labor unions," the pilots' union said. We look forward to those discussions." \nThe carrier's stock, which reached $100 a share in 1997, rose 10 cents to $1.03 a share in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange Monday. \nThe bankruptcy restructuring also is likely to result in fewer flights. Experts say frequent-flier miles and basic fare levels are likely to be retained for the short term, although fare hikes are likely over the longer haul. \nA spokesman for United's pilots union urged passengers Sunday not to abandon the airline during a bankruptcy filing. \n"This is going to be painful for the stockholders and the employees, but the airline's going to keep flying and we're going to come out of this stronger," pilot Herb Hunter said. "The passengers shouldn't notice any difference." \nAirline consultant Robert Mann said the company will have to keep the morale of United's workers from falling too low. \n"It's certainly demoralizing to employees, and the risk is that it will somehow translate into less friendly service -- in effect getting customers in the middle of an emotional problem," said Mann, of R.W. Mann & Co. in Port Washington, N.Y. \nOn pace to lose an industry-record $2.5 billion this year, United had pinned its last hopes of avoiding bankruptcy on getting federal backing for $1.8 billion of a $2 billion loan that banks wouldn't otherwise provide. But the Air Transportation Stabilization Board, created last year to help the airline industry recover after Sept. 11, rejected United's request on Wednesday. \nWhite House spokesman Ari Fleischer declined to comment on the bankruptcy filing. Fleischer said the Bush administration would not second-guess the stabilization board's decision. \nThe linchpin to United's proposal was $5.2 billion in labor cutbacks by 2008, but the three-member federal panel said the airline's business plan was financially unsound and a loan guarantee would have risked U.S. taxpayers picking up the tab. \nUnited has struggled even more than other airlines during the industry's worst-ever slump. The carrier already had lost about $1 billion since mid-2000 by the time of the attacks because of labor turmoil, the industry's highest costs and several failed strategies, including a costly and time-consuming bid to acquire US Airways -- itself now in Chapter 11 bankruptcy. \nUnited cut service and laid off nearly 20,000 workers after the terrorist attacks, but it hasn't come close to making up for revenue lost from the drop-off in business travel. \nUnited's filing dwarfs all other airline bankruptcies. The previous largest was by Continental Airlines in 1990. It is the 11th time a major U.S. airline has filed for bankruptcy since deregulation in 1978, including TWA three times.

Get stories like this in your inbox
Subscribe