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Protected
pensions for AMR’s executives
A
special trust ensures retirement funds for top execs
By
Jon Bonné
MSNBC
April 16, 2003
American
Airlines chief executive Donald J. Carty, who's pension payments will be
protected regardless of the airlines' fate.
A special trust
set up by American Airlines’ top executives will allow them to collect
retirement benefits regardless of whether the airline goes bankrupt,
according to documents filed by the company.THE TRUST COVERS the
pension packages of American Airlines’s parent AMR Corp. Chairman and CEO
Donald Carty and 44 of his top executives.
It was disclosed in an attachment to the company’s annual report, filed
Tuesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Some members of the
airline’s unions were aware of the arrangement after it was filed Tuesday,
and union representatives were apparently told of it during negotiations —
though negotiators were required by American to sign confidentiality
agreements and could not reveal certain details to rank-and-file union
members.
The trust was created last October 14.
In a prescient consideration of its current troubles, the document creating
the fund — which was designed as an amendment to the airline’s executive
pension program — specifically stated that it “shall not be subject to
the claims of the creditors of the Corporation in a bankruptcy or other
insolvency proceeding under Federal or state law.”
In specific, it allows a group of top named
executives to have their pension contributions removed from the company’s
assets and placed in the independent trust. The list includes Peter Bowler,
president of American Eagle; Daniel Garton, executive vice president of
marketing; general counsel Gary Kennedy; and most of AMR’s other vice
presidents.
That money is considered direct income
and is subject to federal taxes, but after it is transferred to the trust,
it is no longer part of AMR’s assets and cannot be targeted by creditors
if the airline were to go bankrupt. It is a legitimate retirement option
under 402(b) and 404(a) of federal tax code, which also requires the company
to deduct taxes from the retirement funds before it turns them over to the
trust. Many companies adjust the gross value of the contribution to cover
the required taxes.
The trust is governed by an executive
committee, which includes Carty, American president Gerard Arpey, CFO
Jeffrey Campbell and Susan Oliver, senior VP of human resources. All qualify
for retirement benefits through the trust. The funds are managed by an
independent trustee, in this case Wachovia Bank of Winston-Salem, N.C.,
which also manages the carrier’s executive pension program. Wachovia,
consulting with the committee, can invest the cash as it sees fit so long as
it adheres to some broad guidelines to “preserve principal and
liquidity” and “maximize income.”
Biggest
airline bankruptcies
The bankruptcy of
United Airlines, the world’s No. 2 carrier, is by far the biggest in
airline history. Below is a list of the top 10 bankruptcy filings by
airlines in the U.S. ranked by assets.
Company
|
Start
|
Assets
|
UAL Corp.’s
United Air Lines
|
12/09/02
|
$22,800,000,000
|
U.S. Airways, Inc.
|
8/11/02
|
$8,025,000,000
|
Continental
Airlines Holdings
|
12/3/90
|
$7,656,140,000
|
Eastern Air Lines,
Inc.
|
3/9/89
|
$4,037,000,000
|
Trans World
Airlines, Inc.
|
1/31/92
|
$2,864,530,000
|
Trans World
Airlines, Inc.
|
6/30/95
|
$2,495,210,000
|
Pan Am Corp.
|
1/8/91
|
$2,440,830,000
|
Trans World
Airlines, Inc.
|
1/10/01
|
$2,137,180,000
|
America West
Airlines
|
6/27/91
|
$1,165,260,000
|
Resorts
International
|
11/12/89
|
$1,034,580,000
|
|
|
|
“These arrangements do not have a direct material
financial impact for the airline,” said Philip Baggaley, airline analyst
for Standard and Poors, “but to the extent that they complicate labor
relations — or for that matter, requests for federal aid — potentially
they can cause difficulties.”
Pension benefits at AMR vary, but a
20-year employee would receive about one-third of average earnings —
including bonuses — upon retirement.
Carty’s base salary in 2001 was $585,813, which was 33 percent less
than a year earlier. He’s credited for over 29 years of service. He has
been with the company since 1979, though he left for two years to work at
Canadian Pacific Airlines. Based on that salary, according to American’s
pension calculation table, he would currently get about $330,000 in pension
benefits per year. However, that does not include any compensation for
bonuses, which he has declined since 2001. Previously, he collected
significant bonuses, including $1.35 million in 2000, which means his annual
package could exceed $900,000 if he begins collecting bonuses again.
The executive pension fund, known as
the Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan or SERP, is designed to cover
executive pensions beyond the maximum pension amounts traditionally allowed
by the IRS, currently somewhere around $200,000 per employee. It is also
separate from American employees’ 401(k) plan, known as $uper $aver, which
has net assets of nearly $3.9 billion. AMR spokesman Bruce Hicks said the
company currently funds about 60 percent of SERP pension liabilities, and
unlike some executive pension plans, it does not include extra compensation
to cover taxes or other fees executives may face.
“It’s real straightforward,” he
said. “It’s very clean in comparison.”
The timing of the disclosure, and the
timing of American’s entire annual report, came unusually late. AMR filed
the report on Tuesday as the unions completed their voting. AMR filed its
last two annual reports in mid-March 2001 and late February 2002. But on
March 31 of this year, AMR requested an extension to file the annual report,
saying that it was “in the process of negotiating and implementing a
crucial cost reduction program” and needed extra time.
“In effect, American is saying they
don’t give a s—t about anyone but these 44 people,” says compensation
expert Graef “Bud” Crystal. “It’s the Marie Antoinette school of
management.”
Crystal wrote in a March column for
Bloomberg News that Delta CEO Leo Mullin put together a similar plan for
himself and 33 top executives. Mullin’s share alone, Crystal estmated, was
$8.2 million in 2002.
Mullin has been widely criticized in
recent weeks for taking a healthy salary and bonuses even as his airline has
been pleading for federal aid to help mend its bottom line. After his
$700,000 salary and a $1.4 million bonus were revealed last month, Mullin
agreed to forgo an expected $1 million bonus this year, along with stock
options and some other perks.
Crystal contrasts Carty’s efforts to
handle criticism of executive pay with those of former American former CEO
Robert Crandall, who was feared throughout the industry for his relentless
tactics. But when trying to win wage concessions, Crandall eschewed his own
pay raises and bonuses.
By contrast, Crystal argues, American
executives’ new trust plan is a sign that airline executives at the
airlines have little commitment to personal sacrifice in order to cut costs.
“They’re voting with their feet that this company won’t survive,” he
says. “The rats are trying to save themselves while the ship’s going
down. That’s what rats do.”
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2002 Global Action on Aging
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