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06/14/2012 | News release
distributed by noodls on 06/14/2012 18:22
Jun 14, 2012
The decision by U.S. District Court Judge Terry Means
granting a temporary restraining order to block the vote by
nearly 10,000 passenger service agents at American Airlines
means workers, not American Airlines, will suffer
irreparable harm - the standard for such an order.
Judge Means will hold a hearing on June 21 for a
preliminary injunction that could further delay the
election and again harm workers who have been fighting for
their right to a vote at American Airlines for 15 years.
Means serves in Fort Worth, Texas and was appointed to the
bench by George Bush in 1991.
Last December, CWA filed for an election for the nearly
10,000 agents. The National Mediation Board set an election
date, but American Airlines repeatedly refused to turn over
its mailing list to the NMB so the vote could go forward.
In May, the airlines filed a lawsuit against the NMB, again
defying the Board's legal order for the airline to supply
mailing information so the election could proceed. Despite
the lawsuit, the NMB moved forward, setting a voting period
of June 21- Aug. 2, citing the agency's longstanding policy
and the intent of the Railway Labor Act to resolve
representation disputes "as expeditiously as possible. Now,
American Airlines is back in court.
American Airlines filed for bankruptcy with $4 billion in
the bank, in large part to throw out its collective
bargaining agreements with union workers and gut the jobs,
benefits and working conditions for the passenger service
group. American Airlines continues to press these workers
to make life changing decisions about their jobs, and in a
short time frame.
American Airlines doesn't want to follow the law, it's
trying to rewrite the law.
There is no retroactivity for legislation, and clearly none
for the Federal Aviation Administration Reauthorization.
That's been made clear to the airline by Senate leaders,
who wrote to CEO Thomas Horton on May 15. "Beyond the
clearly established precedent that limits the retroactivity
of changes in the law, in this case, Congress included
specific language in the amendments addressing this issue,
they said.
The Senate went even further, they wrote, with floor
discussion by the two leading chairmen, Senators
Rockefeller and Harkin, confirming that "the showing of
interest requirement set forth in this legislation should
only apply prospectively.
CWA President Larry Cohen said CWA and agents have a
message for American Airlines management. "This decision
will live in infamy as an atrocious assault on workers'
rights. It will be remembered as total collaboration
with a management discredited not only by vicious union
busting but by the disgrace of bankruptcy. CWA will
carry on this fight for representation and justice and
decency for as long as it takes. American Airlines CEO
Thomas Horton has picked the wrong fight.