Delta Air Lines is paying out $1.4b in profit sharing, more than double what it paid employees a year ago. The payments, which more than 100,000 Delta employees received Wednesday, come to about 10% of their annual salary, or more than a month’s pay. All Delta employees below mid-level managers participate in the program, the airline said. The payout is up 146% from the profit sharing payment of a year earlier, and well above the $108m for 2021. There was no profit sharing for 2020 due to the record losses at the airline due to the plunge in demand for flying during the first year of the pandemic. This is the second largest profit sharing payout by Delta, trailing only the record $1.6b it paid for 2019. That bonus was roughly equivalent to two months of pay per employee. Delta is primarily a nonunion company, with only about 20% of its employees being unionized, primarily its 18,500 pilots. The Association of Flight Attendants has been trying to organize its flight attendants, so far without success. Profit sharing plans became more common in the airline industry after a series of bankruptcy filings and money losing years, as well as consolidation in the industry earlier this century. Unions, stinnging from concessions they gave up during bankruptcy, agreed to the profit sharing plans as a way to recoup some of what members had lost. Primarily nonunion Delta, which was formed by a merger of Delta and Northwest Airlines as they came out of bankruptcy, has the most lucrative profit sharing plan in terms of the percentage of profits paid to employees.<br/>
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A Delta Air Lines flight returned to Amsterdam Tuesday after what the airline cryptically called “improperly packed carry-on bag.” Social media posts, however, suggest that euphemism is doing a lot of heavy lifting. The Daily Mail reported that maggots were falling from the overhead bin after a passenger brought rotting fish in their hand luggage. Flight tracker FlightAware shows the plane, which was bound for Detroit, only made it as far as England before turning back. One passenger told The Daily Mail that affected travelers were given 8,000 air miles, hotel room vouchers and a $30 meal ticket if they were delayed overnight. Delta acknowledged the basics of the incident in a statement to USA TODAY. “We apologize to the customers of Flight 133 on Feb. 13 as their trip was interrupted due to an improperly packed carry-on bag,” the statement said. “The aircraft returned to the gate and customers were placed on the next available flight. The aircraft was removed from service for cleaning.”<br/>