Delta pilots received record overtime while MAX crisis hit rivals - unions
Delta pilots are receiving record overtime, straining the airline’s labor costs, in part because it has added more flights to fill a supply gap left by the grounding of the Boeing 737 MAX at rival carriers, union officials said. The surge in overtime highlights a split in the fortunes of US airline workers as carriers like Delta, which does not fly the MAX, scramble to meet demand while staff at rivals like Southwest and American Airlines sit at home on basic pay. Delta issued a record 40,554 “green slips” - double-pay for overtime flying - between May and August, double the same period in 2018, according to pilot union Delta Master Executive Council, a unit of the Air Line Pilots Association. “There were weekend days that I would get up to 10 calls a day to pick up an extra shift or an extra flight,” Delta pilot Dana Dann-Messier, who flies a Boeing 717, told Reuters. “There were times when the pace of the summer was so hectic that guys wouldn’t be volunteering because they were so wiped out,” said Dann-Messier, who is based in Atlanta. Delta, due to publish Q3 results on Thursday before the market opens, last week raised its estimate for growth in Q3 cost per available seat mile, excluding fuel costs, to about 2.5%, in part due to employee wage increases. “Maintaining the operational reliability customers have come to expect and love about Delta required additional pilot flying this summer, largely due to severe weather impacting our operation and some incremental flying above our previous plan,” a Delta spokesman said. He played down the 737 MAX grounding as a major contributing factor.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2019-10-10/sky/delta-pilots-received-record-overtime-while-max-crisis-hit-rivals-unions
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/logo.png
Delta pilots received record overtime while MAX crisis hit rivals - unions
Delta pilots are receiving record overtime, straining the airline’s labor costs, in part because it has added more flights to fill a supply gap left by the grounding of the Boeing 737 MAX at rival carriers, union officials said. The surge in overtime highlights a split in the fortunes of US airline workers as carriers like Delta, which does not fly the MAX, scramble to meet demand while staff at rivals like Southwest and American Airlines sit at home on basic pay. Delta issued a record 40,554 “green slips” - double-pay for overtime flying - between May and August, double the same period in 2018, according to pilot union Delta Master Executive Council, a unit of the Air Line Pilots Association. “There were weekend days that I would get up to 10 calls a day to pick up an extra shift or an extra flight,” Delta pilot Dana Dann-Messier, who flies a Boeing 717, told Reuters. “There were times when the pace of the summer was so hectic that guys wouldn’t be volunteering because they were so wiped out,” said Dann-Messier, who is based in Atlanta. Delta, due to publish Q3 results on Thursday before the market opens, last week raised its estimate for growth in Q3 cost per available seat mile, excluding fuel costs, to about 2.5%, in part due to employee wage increases. “Maintaining the operational reliability customers have come to expect and love about Delta required additional pilot flying this summer, largely due to severe weather impacting our operation and some incremental flying above our previous plan,” a Delta spokesman said. He played down the 737 MAX grounding as a major contributing factor.<br/>