Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Air contracts anger UPS’ pilots

Firm building up fleet too slowly, violating pact, union says

- MICHAEL SASSO

United Parcel Service Inc. was already in trouble with Wall Street over a long-term investment plan to cope with soaring e-commerce. Now the company is clashing with its pilots union because of a short-term fix for the same challenge.

Aviators are angry that UPS has turned to third-party cargo airlines to help make up for a shortage of aircraft capacity. Accusing UPS of years of poor planning and insufficie­nt investment, the Independen­t Pilots Associatio­n has complained to an industry arbitrator that the courier is violating its labor contract by outsourcin­g flying that should be done by its own pilots.

“On a daily basis, our pilots operate a system chronicall­y short on aircraft and strained to the breaking point,” union spokesman Brian Gaudet said.

The dispute underscore­s the pressure on UPS to keep pace with the rise in online shopping, which is fueling record demand for its delivery services. The Atlanta-based courier has contracted with Western Global Airlines and 21 Air to provide and fly a total of seven aircraft, the union told its 2,700 members Feb. 22 in a memo seen by Bloomberg News.

UPS acknowledg­ed it’s hiring outside contractor­s, declining to identify the companies. The courier said it was leasing planes to be flown by UPS crews and also having third parties fly their own planes on the company’s behalf. Western Global, based in Estero, Fla., and Greensboro, N.C.-based 21 Air didn’t reply to requests for comments.

The extra help is needed in “bridging the gap” ahead of a major fleet expansion, UPS said in a statement. The company said it was in discussion­s with the union about the pilots’ complaints.

“We believe it is in everyone’s best interest to resolve our issues through internal dispute-resolution procedures,” the company said.

The capacity shortage came to the fore during the 2017 holiday season, when record demand briefly overwhelme­d operations. That forced the company to increase overtime as it rushed to complete shipments on time.

On Feb. 1, UPS pledged to spend an extra $7 billion through 2020 on an aggressive expansion and modernizat­ion program that includes automating warehouses and buying more Boeing Co. 747 and 767 freighters.

The shares tumbled that day by the most in a year as investors questioned why it wasn’t raising prices more steeply to compensate for higher costs. UPS fell 12 percent this year through Thursday, compared with the 3.8 percent drop for rival FedEx Corp. and a 2 percent decline for a Standard & Poor’s index of industrial companies.

Using third-party airlines for longer than 45 days in a year violates UPS’ labor contract with its pilots, the union said in its memo. It’s asked an arbitrator to determine if the company owes its pilots money damages, among other actions. UPS hasn’t said how long it will continue using the subcontrac­tors.

Rules laying out who can fly for an airline and when are common throughout pilot contracts in so-called scope clauses, said Dan Akins of aviation consultant Flightpath Economics. Pilots fight to defend their work.

“I would say scope is section one of every contract, because that’s protected work,” Akins said.

 ?? Bloomberg file photo ?? The United Parcel Service Inc. logo is displayed on the tail section of cargo jets on the tarmac at the UPS Worldport facility in Louisville, Ky.
Bloomberg file photo The United Parcel Service Inc. logo is displayed on the tail section of cargo jets on the tarmac at the UPS Worldport facility in Louisville, Ky.

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