Chattanooga Times Free Press

United, flight attendants near tentative deal on new joint contract, first since 2010

- BY LAUREN ZUMBACH CHICAGO TRIBUNE (TNS)

CHICAGO — United Airlines and a negotiatin­g team for the company’s 25,000 flight attendants have agreed on terms of a new contact, the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants said in a statement on its website. It would be the first joint contract for the airline’s flight attendants since the 2010 merger between United and Continenta­l Airlines.

The language will be finalized this weekend before the agreement is sent to a council of elected local leaders representi­ng the United flight attendants for approval Monday, the AFA union said.

A tentative agreement would only be official if that council votes to back the proposed labor agreement. At that point it would be sent to union members for a vote.

Ratificati­on would mean flight attendants from United and Continenta­l would no longer operate under different work rules.

United employees including airport workers, security officers and other staffers ratified a new contract in April. The airline also recently negotiated separate deals with its pilots and dispatcher­s but is still working on a deal with its 9,000 mechanics.

At the company’s annual shareholde­r meeting this month, where flight attendants and mechanics picketed, CEO Oscar Munoz said the airline’s labor issues remain a top priority.

“Today’s agreement honors the invaluable role that our flight attendants contribute to United’s success and brings us closer than ever to uniting them under a single contract,” Munoz said in a news release. “It’s been a long journey and I’m grateful to our outstandin­g flight attendants.”

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