Tag: North America

UPS Airlines opens anchorage training facility

UPS officially opened its newest flight training facility, a 27,000-square-foot center here that will reduce the time spent away from home for training by Anchorage-based pilots.

Housing two flight simulators, classrooms and offices, the facility is the second such pilot training center in the UPS network and will be in operation approximately 20 hours each day. Established to support all phases of flight training, the new facility will make it unnecessary for Anchorage-based pilots to fly to Louisville for training. The UPS Airlines and its main global Worldport hub are located in Louisville.

In December 2006, UPS made Anchorage the home of a new pilot domicile. Currently, 402 crewmembers are based here and that number is expected to increase to 438 by year’s end. Thirty-five employees, including training instructors, simulator technicians and administrative staff, are based at the new training facility.

The Anchorage Flight Training Facility was built in a converted hangar located at the south end of Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport. It houses UPS’s only 747-400 flight simulator along with its second MD-11 simulator. Both of those aircraft are used to provide the long-range international lift necessary for UPS to maintain its global reach.

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FedEx Loses Investors as Courts Upend Founder's Model

FedEx Corp. tells its ground-service drivers when to work, what to charge customers and what kind of socks and shoes to wear, the workers say. Drivers who sued the company argue that makes them employees.

Founder and Chief Executive Officer Fred Smith, who has served as co-chair of U.S. Republican presidential candidate John McCain’s campaign, opposes changing their status from independent contractors to employees.

The trouble is the FedEx CEO isn’t getting much support from shareholders. Calculating from five years ago, before its court losses on the drivers’ claims, FedEx’s total stock return was 25 percent, compared with 11 percent for United Parcel Service Inc.
Since a judge in Indiana certified a nationwide lawsuit Oct. 15 for drivers demanding FedEx federal pension benefits reserved for employees, total return for the company dropped 19 percent compared with a decline of 13 percent for UPS, the world’s biggest package-delivery company.

FedEx, which has more planes in its delivery fleet than UPS, has had to pay higher prices for jet fuel in the last 18 months. Amid a slowing economy, some customers have switched from premium services such as FedEx’s to cheaper delivery methods, Smith has said.

Rulings Awaited

The FedEx CEO now awaits rulings by U.S. District Judge Robert Miller in South Bend, Indiana, on whether the drivers are employees. If they are, they’ll seek USD 1 billion in damages.

At stake is a business model that provides FedEx Ground a cost advantage over UPS that may be more than 30 percent. That’s the estimated savings enjoyed by businesses that use contractors rather than employees, according to Marick Masters, a business professor at the University of Pittsburgh.

In March, the same Indiana judge ruled that workers in 20 states could sue as 20 individual groups to win employee status. Because those class actions and a nationwide suit involve so many drivers, anticipated rulings by the Indiana judge on whether the workers are misclassified pose the biggest threat to date to Smith’s vision.

Tax Case

The dispute also has opened FedEx up to a series of related legal responsibilities, including a potential pretax liability from unpaid payroll taxes of as much as USD 2.5 billion. It may force the second-largest U.S. package-delivery company to either overhaul its contractor model or throw it out entirely.

FedEx, with USD 1.1 billion in net income in fiscal 2008, declined to say whether it had set aside reserves to cover the possible USD 1 billion in damages or the potential USD 2.5 billion tax liability. Spokesman Maury Lane said FedEx follows generally accepted accounting principles in disclosing reserves.

The bigger problem for the package service may be how to overhaul the business model to make it compliant.

Shift to Contractors

Treating workers as contractors rather than employees has been gaining popularity among U.S. employers with the number in the workforce rising 25 percent to about 10.3 million from 1999 to 2005, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. The reason for the increase is the cost differential according to Masters, the business professor.

A Teamsters Union financial model predicts FedEx costs would go up USD 426 million a year if the company compensated the drivers as it does present employees. The model assumes FedEx would pay Social Security and Medicare taxes, unemployment and worker- compensation insurance, vacations, health insurance and 15 hours a week of overtime.

FedEx’s Lane declined to comment on the Teamsters’ model or Masters’s 30 percent savings estimate, except to call both “speculative.” He declined to say how much FedEx saves by using contractors.

FedEx describes the drivers as small-business owners who invest in their trucks and are free to hire helpers or substitutes.

New Model

Before converting the drivers to payroll workers, said Pat Becker Jr., Becker Capital Management Inc. chief

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FedEx Freight Canada receives Partners in Protection Certification

FedEx announced that less-than-truckload subsidiary FedEx Freight Canada has received a Partners in Protection (PIP) certification from the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA).

Similar to Customs and Border Protection’s C-TPAT (Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism), PIP was established in 1995 and according to the CBSA Website it is a program that enlists the cooperation of private industry to enhance border and trade chain security, combat organized crime and terrorism and help detect and prevent contraband smuggling.

FedEx Freight Canada applied for PIP certification on March 18, 2008, according to Reed. The modernized PIP program requirements and application process came out after this date; however no applications were to be accepted for the modernized PIP program until July 1. FedEx Freight Canada applied for recognition and acceptance into the modernized PIP program on July 2. FedEx Freight Canada’s Toronto facility was inspected June 25 and passed with no recommendations regarding security. FedEx Freight Canada was awarded the first modernized PIP certification in Canada on July 30.

In July, the CBSA and CBP said they have collaborated on an arrangement to strengthen cargo security to “promote a smarter, more secure and efficient border.” CBSA said that with the new arrangement, both countries will now use similar criteria when granting companies membership to their respective cross-border programs: PIP and C-TPAT.

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ABX Air finalizes severance and retention plans

ABX Air, Inc., announced it has reached an agreement with DHL on severance and retention plans for impending job reductions.

Following a period of voluntary reductions, ABX Air will serve Workers’ Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN) notices to approximately 200 employees next week. Government officials will be notified as well. Workers will be leaving jobs no later than 60 days from the day they receive the WARN notices.

This reduction is a result of DHL reducing 23 ABX Air DC-9 aircraft this year. These fleet reductions are the first associated with the plan DHL announced at the end of May. DHL has indicated to ABX Air that the DC-9 reductions will continue until all ABX Air DC-9s are parked sometime in 2009.

To assist in the transition for dislocated employees, ABX Air is working closely with the State Rapid Response Team and members of the Five Star Job Centers of Southwest Ohio, who are also coordinating with other surrounding counties. ABX Air has set up an onsite Transition Center to facilitate access to the available support services. Full- and part-time employees will be eligible to receive severance options, which include continued health and welfare coverage. All of these measures are intended to help dislocated workers bridge the employment gap.

ABX Air expects that additional notices will be necessary as more DC-9s are removed from the fleet. ABX Air’s DC-9 schedule of reductions is not affected by the discussions between DHL and UPS, but by DHL’s schedule to park the aircraft, as well as other ABX Air business adjustments.

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Estafeta grows H1 volumes by 12.5pct

Estafeta increased its volumes by 12.5 pct in the first half of 2008 despite a 6 pct drop in overall air cargo volumes in Mexico due to the impact of the slowing US economy, local media reported.

The leading express company handled a daily average of 58,800 shipments at its national hub at San Luis Potosí, in northern-central Mexico, which was equivalent to 180 tonnes a day.

The Mexican express market is facing difficult conditions due to higher fuel prices and the US economic recession, according to the Estafeta chief. Foreign carriers reduced their capacity in the Mexican market by 15pct in the first half-year while local airlines grew by 7.1pct, he said. But Armendáriz stressed: “Air cargo is a critical factor for the country’s competitiveness, although we still have to do much so that this sector can become a true catalyst for the national economy.

Estafeta is investing some USD 30 million (EUR 19 million) in its air network and infrastructure this year. The bulk of the investment will go on a runway extension at its hub at San Luis Potosí in northern-central Mexico that will enable international flight operations. It has also added two Bombardier CRJ jets with capacity of five tonnes to its fleet of five B737 cargo planes, which have capacity of about 14 tonnes and operate to 12 destinations within Mexico and abroad. Other new centres are planned in central Mexico.

In 2007, Estafeta increased net sales by 13pct to USD 250 million and carried 25 million shipments. It said at the start of this year that it is targeting 15pct revenue growth this year, partly to be generated through a new LTL trucking service covering Mexico and the USA.

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