United Airlines, the primary subsidiary of the UAL Corporation, is a major airline of the United States headquartered in unincorporated Elk Grove Township, Illinois, near Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, the airline's largest traffic hub, with 650 daily departures. Starting in early 2007, United Airlines will move their headquaters to downtown Chicago, instead of proposed cities of Denver and San Francisco.
As of December 31, 2005, United is the world's second-largest airline in terms of revenue-passenger-kilometers (behind American Airlines), third-largest in terms of total operating revenues (behind Air France-KLM and American Airlines), and fourth-largest airline in terms of total passengers transported (behind American Airlines, Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines). United has roughly 54,000 employees and operates approximately 460 aircraft.
On February 1, 2006, United emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection under which it had operated since December 9, 2002, the largest and longest airline bankruptcy case in history.
United operates a low-cost leisure airline called Ted. The name is taken from the last three letters of its parent United. Ted serves leisure destinations within the United States, Mexico, and Canada with 240 daily flights utilizing 56 aircraft. Ted was created to compete with other low-cost airlines like Frontier and Southwest Airlines.
United has focused for the last several years on its international presence, notably in the People's Republic of China (with nonstop flights to Beijing and Shanghai from its hubs in Chicago and San Francisco). The airline also hopes to begin flying to Guangzhou from San Francisco in the near future *. These routes offer a higher proportion of premium fare passengers while being relatively insulated from the cutthroat competition in the domestic market, especially from low-cost carriers. United has also focused more on Latin America, a region from which it had largely retreated in the last decade, and added new destinations and frequencies to Mexico and the Caribbean and will continue to do so into the next decade.
As of December 31, 2005, United operates 460 aircraft (230 owned, 230 leased) with a weighted average fleet age of 10.7 years.
United is one of the last two US major carriers (American Airlines being the other) to operate three-class service, mostly on international and high-revenue domestic routes. Most flights within North America and to Hawaii utilize two-class aircraft, while all Ted aircraft are one-class. United brands its classes as UnitedFirst, UnitedBusiness, and UnitedEconomy. As with most airlines, actual service levels vary with route, flight, and aircraft configuration.
United's mainline fleet features Economy Plus, a forward section in the economy cabin that offers an additional 5 to 6 inches (127 to 152 mm) of space although cabin service is the same. Seats in this section are reserved for passengers on certain high-fare tickets, for Premier members of United's frequent flyer program, and elite-level members of Star Alliance frequent flyer programs. As of August 2005, Economy Plus access was also available to non-elites through an annual subscription fee or a per-flight upgrade fee.
| Type | Number | Seats | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Airbus 319-100 | 55 (23 on order) | 120 (8/112) | Domestic/short-haul, used on some transcontinental routes |
| Airbus 320-200 | 97 (18 on deferred order) | 138 (12/126) - Mainline 156 (0/156) - Ted | Domestic/short-haul, used on some transcontinental routes |
| Boeing 737-300 | 64 | 120 (8/112) - Standard 128 (8/120) - Former Shuttle | Domestic/short-haul, being replaced by Airbus A319 and A320 |
| Boeing 737-500 | 30 | 104 (8/96) - Standard 110 (8/102) - Former Shuttle | Domestic/short-haul, being replaced by Airbus A319 and A320 |
| Boeing 747-400 | 30 | 347 (14/73/260) | includes 2 from Northwest Airlines Used on Trans-Pacific, IAD-FRA, IAD-LHR routes |
| Boeing 757-200 | 97 | 182 (24/158) - Standard 200 (12/26/72) - Transcontinental | Used on transcontinental, Hawaii, Latin America routes |
| Boeing 767-300ER | 35 | 244 (34/210) - Domestic 200 (10/32/158) - International | Used on transcontinental, transatlantic, interhub, Hawai'i, Latin America routes |
| Boeing 777-200/200ER | 52 | 348 (36/312) - Domestic 258 (12/49/197) - Transatlantic 253 (10/45/198) - Transpacific | Launch customer and primary design partner transpacific, Used on transatlantic, transcontinental, interhub, Hawai'i routes |
The Boeing 767 and 757, the A320 and A319, and the 737-300 and 737-500 have common type ratings; flight crews are certified to operate either aircraft without any additional training. The A320 and A319, and to a lesser extent the two 737 types, are so commonly substituted for one another that economy row numbers have been synchronized between the two.
United was the launch customer for a number of aircraft types, including the Douglas DC-10 (with American Airlines) and several Boeing aircraft: the 727 (with Eastern Air Lines), the 737-200, the 767, and the 777.
Separately, United currently codeshares with SNCF French Rail as United Ground Link to stations in France and has marketing agreements of varying intimacy with Aeromar, Air Dolomiti (a subsidiary company of Deutsche Lufthansa AG), Air China, Aloha Airlines, Continental Connection (operated by Gulfstream), Great Lakes Airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Shanghai Airlines, and Virgin Blue.
In 1927, airplane pioneer William Boeing founded his own airline, Boeing Air Transport, and soon began buying other airmail carriers, including Varney's. Within four years, Boeing's holdings would grow to include a number of airlines, airplane and parts manufacturing companies, and several airports. In 1929, the company changed its name to United Aircraft - Transport Corp. In 1930, as the capacity of airplanes proved sufficient to carry not only mail but also passengers, Boeing Air Transport hired a registered nurse, Ellen Church, to assist passengers. United claims Church as the first airline stewardess.
Following the Air Mail Scandal of 1930, the Air Mail Act of 1934 banned the common ownership of manufacturers and airlines. United Aircraft-Transport's President Philip G. Johnson was forced to resign and went on to Trans-Canada Airlines, the future Air Canada. William Boeing's company was broken into three: a parts supplier (the future United Technologies), an aircraft manufacturer (the Boeing Airplane Company), and an airline group—United Air Lines. The airline company's new president, hired to make a fresh start as airmail contracts were re-awarded in 1934, was William A. Patterson, who remained as president of United Airlines until 1963.
During World War II United trained ground crews, modified airplanes for use as bombers, and transported mail, material, and passengers in the war effort. Post-war United benefitted from both the wartime development of new airplane technologies (like the pressurized cabin which permitted planes to fly above the weather) and a boom in customer demand for air travel. This was also the period in which Pan American Airways established a Tokyo hub and revived its Pacific route system that would later be acquired by United.
On November 1, 1955, United Airlines Flight 629, which was flying from Stapleton Airport in Denver to Portland, Oregon, was bombed, killing everyone on board. The bomb was planted by a man named Jack Graham, who was executed a year after the explosion *.
The company merged with Capital Airlines on June 1, 1961, making it the world's largest commercial airline and giving it a route network covering the entire United States.
In 1968 the company reorganized, creating UAL Corporation, with United Airlines as a wholly owned subsidiary.
Economic turmoil, labor unrest, and the pressures of the 1978 Airline Deregulation Act greatly affected the company, which incurred losses and saw a greatly increased turnover in its senior management through the 1970s and early 1980s.
In May 1981, one week after archrival American Airlines launched AAdvantage, the first frequent flyer program, United launched its Mileage Plus. The Wall Street Journal mistakenly reported United's program to be the first.
In 1982, United became the launch customer for the Boeing 767, taking its first delivery of 767-200s on August 19th.
That struggle cost the airline $1 billion, and provoked a long period of labor unrest and financial deterioration that culminated in bankruptcy nearly 20 years later. Following Ferris' termination by the board, Allegis divested its non-airline properties in 1987 and reverted to the name UAL Corp. That helped clear the path for the United Pilots to do an ESOP takeover of United, which eventually did happen in 1994.
In 1994, 55% of company stock was given to employees in exchange for salary concessions from its unions. The ESOP (Employee Stock Ownership Plan) made United the largest employee-owned corporation in the world. It used the opportunity to create a low-cost subsidiary, Shuttle by United, in an attempt to compete with low-cost carriers.
There were three previous attempts to form an ESOP at United, in 1987, 1989, and 1990. Fees paid to advisors on both sides totaled $145 million for all four ESOP plans. An internal pilots' union report by Thomas Sullivan (U.S. Attorney for northern Illinois), revealed that "pilot union leaders made secret agreements in 1989 and 1994 to pay millions of dollars in fees to lawyers already on the union's staff or on retainer. They did not disclose these fees to the rank and file."
That Sullivan report said that Roger Hall, the United-ALPA-MEC chairman, had authorized a payment of $2 million to Charles Goldstein, who was the union's own staff lawyer, but he did not reveal that to his board. The report also concluded that Hall and Goldstein had violated union rules, and many of United's pilots openly complained that the advice from Goldstein could hardly have been objective if he knew the ESOP had to be successful in order to receive that $2 million fee. Union leaders agreed to let Goldstein keep $750,000 of that $2 million, after he threatened a lawsuit. Hall's predecessor, Frederick Dubinsky, also did not reveal to the rank and file that he had authorized a payment of $375,000 to Goldstein after the failed ESOP attempt of 1989. Both Hall and Dubinsky denied they ever did anything wrong, but Hall did resign upon request of the pilot union board.
The Sullivan report also uncovered a $4.12 million "success" fee to be paid to Cohen, Weiss & Simon, which had been receiving hourly billing payments from the union for its work on the ESOP buyout. Again, that fee wasn't common knownledge until after the ESOP was completed. Once that became known, Cohen, Weiss & Simon agreed to return the entire $4.12 million.
United CEO Wolf got a consulting job with Lazard Freres, the very investment company he had hired to advise United's board during the ESOP buyout process. Stewart Oran, the key legal advisor to the pilots' union during all 4 ESOP plans, received a $5.5 million package to join United's management as legal counsel after the ESOP was formed. Meanwhile, all employees who participated in the ESOP took pay cuts ranging from 15 to 25%. They did that in return for the ESOP stock that they received, which eventually became worthless, when United was forced into bankruptcy. Today, "Workers took pay cut while others got rich," July 12, 1995
In 1995, Roger Hall and Frederick Dubinsky filed a lawsuit against their own MEC, ALPA National, and named numerous ALPA individuals, including Randolph Babbit, the President of ALPA. They alleged that they were libeled and defamed and that their privacy was invaded as a result of an August 1994 letter that alleged they had been guilty of criminal conduct in relation to the ESOP buyouts. The trial court dismissed 15 of the 18 counts in the complaint, but did sustain 3 counts. Both sides appealed and the appellate court reversed the dismissal of 4 of the 15 counts and sent the case back to the trial court for further proceedings. Daily Law Bulletin 7/9/99
United was a launch customer of the Boeing 777 and had significant input on its design. It was also the first airline to introduce the twin-jet in commercial service.
In May 2000, United announced plans to acquire competitor US Airways in a complex deal valued at $11.6 billion. The offer drew immediate scorn from consumer groups and employees of both airlines. By the following year, regulatory sentiment was against the deal, and United withdrew the offer just before the Department of Justice barred the merger on antitrust grounds in July. The two airlines subsequently formed a partnership that led to US Airways's entrance into the Star Alliance.
May 2000 also saw a bitter contract dispute between United and its pilots' union. Planning for the busy summer season, United had counted on its pilots flying overtime. However, the pilots could not be forced to work overtime, and most pilots refused to fly the extra hours. Although United knew they would have to cancel numerous flights if this were to happen, they did not hire new pilots to make up for the potential shortage. Over the summer, United ended up having to cancel a large portion of its schedule at its major hubs. Eventually, CEO Jim Goodwin and the rest of the management had to get the pilots back in the cockpits and quickly offered the pilots a 48% increase over four years with up to 28% upfront. The large increase in pay and the loss of many of its frequent fliers, especially business travelers, started United on the road to bankruptcy. Coupled with the terrorist attacks of September 11th, 2001 and the resulting economic and tourism downturn, United's economic woes went from bad to worse.
As part of the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack, two United Airlines planes were hijacked, a Boeing 767-222 (Flight 175) that crashed into one of the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, and a Boeing 757-222 (Flight 93) that crashed in rural Pennsylvania. The latter was suspected to have been directed towards either the White House or the United States Capitol building.
Unable to secure additional capital, UAL Corporation filed for chapter 11 protection against bankruptcy in December. The ESOP was terminated, although by then its shares had become virtually worthless. Blame for the bankruptcy has fallen on the events of September 11, which triggered financial crisis in all the major North American airlines. However, the rise of low-cost carriers, labor disputes, and problems within the management structure of the company also contributed significantly.
United continued operations during its bankruptcy, but was forced to cut its costs drastically and under delicate terms. Tens of thousands of workers were furloughed, and all city ticket offices in the US closed. It cancelled several existing and planned routes, and eliminated its entire Latin American gateway and flight crew base at Miami International Airport after March 1, 2004.
At the same time, the airline continued to invest in new projects. On November 12, 2003, it launched a new low-cost carrier, Ted, to compete with other low-cost airlines. In 2004 it launched its luxury "p.s." (for "premium service") service on re-configured 757s from JFK Airport in New York City to Los Angeles and San Francisco. The service was targeted to business customers and high-end leisure customers in the coast-to-coast market.
On December 9, 2004, the airline made history when UA869 (747-400) landed at Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The scheduled flight from San Francisco via Hong Kong was the first by a U.S. airline since the end of the Vietnam War, when Pan Am halted service shortly before the fall of Saigon.
Financial pressure on the airline was heavy. The SARS epidemic in 2003 depressed traffic on United's extensive Pacific network. The soaring cost of jet fuel ate eaten away at profits. United made, withdrew, and followed several fare hikes on overseas routes, citing rising fuel costs, in 2004 and 2005. Indeed, two days after its triumphant first flight to Vietnam, United announced that it would cut U.S. flight capacity by 14% after the holidays and add more international flights, which were more profitable.
United took advantage of its Chapter 11 status to negotiate hard-to-cut costs with employees, suppliers, and contractors, including cancellation of feeder contracts with United Express Atlantic Coast Airlines (which became Independence Air) and Air Wisconsin (which became a US Airways Express carrier).
Most controversial of all, however, was the 2005 cancellation of its pension plan, the largest such default in U.S. corporate history. It renegotiated its contracts with the pilots' and mechanics' unions for lower pay; however, the Association of Flight Attendants resisted until the bankruptcy court ruled in United's favor. Criticism was also leveled at the CEO, Glenn Tilton, for demanding pay cuts from employees while receiving the highest salary of any major U.S. airline CEO *. Although Tilton's salary was the highest in the industry, his pay mix did not include the level of stock options and bonuses granted to his counterparts.
Originally slated to exit bankruptcy protection after 2½ years in the third quarter of 2005, United requested yet another extension in light of record-high fuel prices. On August 26, 2005, the bankruptcy court extended the airline's exclusive right to file a reorganization plan to November 1, although it also stated firmly this extension would be the last. United announced at the same time it had raised $3 billion in exit financing and filed its Plan of Reorganization, as announced, on September 7, 2005.
The bankruptcy court approved the restructuring plan on January 20, 2006, clearing the way for United to exit bankruptcy on February 1, 2006, and finally return to normal operations. Its emergence as a smaller, much more efficient carrier has in turn put additional pressure on its competitors to reduce costs and capacity.
On July 16th, 2006, United Airlines announced after months of speculation that it would be moving it's headquarters from suburban Elk Grove Village to the Chicago Loop. It was widely expected that United would chose Chicago over other contenders Denver and San Francisco as United itself has in the past billed itself as "Chicago's Hometown Airline".
The early slogan "The Main Line Airway," emphasizing its signature New York-Chicago-San Francisco route, was replaced in 1965 with "Fly the Friendly Skies." The "friendly skies" tagline was used until 1996, sometimes with other United Slogans such as "The Great White Way to New York" (1971-1972), "The Friendly Skies of your land" (a/k/a "Mother Country") (1972-1976), "You're the boss" (1976-1977), "United we fly" (1977-1978), "That's what friendly skies are all about" (1980), "You're not just flying, you're flying the Friendly Skies" (mid 1980's), "United - Rising" during the mid 1990's, and "We Are United" following the September 11th incident. Most recently, United started using the tagline "It's time to fly", voiced over by Robert Redford in their famous commercials using their now renowned animations.
United's theme song is George Gershwin's 1924 "Rhapsody in Blue", which it licensed from Gershwin's estate for $500,000 (as noted in Eldred v. Ashcroft 537 U.S. 186 (2003)). "Rhapsody" would have entered the public domain in 2000, but the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 extended its copyright another 20 years.
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