Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Battle for Public Opinion Begins


On Wednesday, Delta began placing newspaper ads in a dozen cities thanking those communities for the support they showed Tuesday following Delta's Plan of Reorganization announcement. The ads, featuring an open letter from Jerry Grinstein, appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution; Cincinnati Enquirer and Post; Salt Lake City Tribune and Deseret News (also in SLC); Augusta Chronicle; Tallahassee Democrat; Montgomery Advertiser; The State in Columbia, S.C.; Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette; Harrisburg Patriot-News; Albany (N.Y.) Times-Union; Boston Herald; and the Raleigh News & Observer.



Please visit keepdeltamydelta.org to sign an e petition and show your support for Delta's standalone plan. Thank you!

Delta Rallys Public Opinion

Delta Air Lines wooed supporters from Capitol Hill to City Hall Tuesday as it launched a battle in the court of public opinion against a hostile takeover with rallies held at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport and in eight other locations. The events were aimed at generating grassroots support for Delta as it fights to stave off a hostile takeover by US Airways. They took place the same day that Delta filed a reorganization plan in bankruptcy court that the Atlanta-based airline says is better for creditors than the deal US Airways is proposing.
While a decision in bankruptcy court could be months away, Delta gathered key allies at Tuesday's rally at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky. "I am opposed, categorically opposed, to a hostile takeover of Delta Air Lines," U.S. Rep. Geoff Davis told a room filled with uniformed Delta employees, airport workers and political, civic and business leaders who had come to take part in the employee-led campaign, dubbed "Keep Delta My Delta."

"If this merger were to come to pass - it comes down to satisfying a group of institutional shareholders who invest in Wall Street or the families and the employees of this company who have worked so hard, I side with the families because the economics are there," said the Hebron Republican. The economics he and several other speakers spoke of are those that have made the airport the No. 1 driver of Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky's economy with an annual impact estimated at $5 billion. With Delta and its Comair subsidiary providing 80 percent of the flights, the futures of Delta and Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, the airline's second largest hub, are interlocked.

Davis said he fears if US Airways succeeds in forcing the merger with Delta, it would abandon Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky as a hub in favor of one it already has in Philadelphia. And because US Airways has committed to its own regional carriers not to downsize, cutbacks of regional jets called for in its plan would likely come out of Comair, he said.
"And that can mean only one thing: the effective end of Comair. And I oppose that because that's our homegrown airline here in Northern Kentucky, which is also profitable and having a huge impact on the region," Davis said. Cincinnati Mayor Mark Mallory also expressed concern that a U.S. Airways takeover of Delta would mean the end of Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky as a hub.
"A hostile takeover by US Airways upon Delta would not be good for the city of Cincinnati, would not be good for the state of Ohio, would not be good for the state of Kentucky and would not be good for the United States of America," Mallory said. "Ladies and gentlemen, we must do everything within our power to oppose this hostile takeover." Ellen Van der Horst, president of the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber, and Steve Stevens, president of the Northern Kentucky Chamber of Commerce, spoke of the impact a merger with US Airways would have on the 10,000 businesses the two organizations represent. Van der Horst forecast a "significant reduction" in flights from the airport if US Airways succeeds in its takeover and that would have a negative impact on the ability to attract and retain businesses and jobs to the region, she said.
Stevens talked about the major impact that spending by employees of Delta and Comair has on the local economy. If the bankruptcy court decides in favor of US Airways' takeover, the cutbacks that would follow would curtail that spending.

"This is not a good decision for Delta and threatens this hub. It cannot be a good decision for Northern Kentucky or Greater Cincinnati," Stevens said. Dan Lincoln, president of the Greater Cincinnati Convention and Visitor's Bureau, and Tom Caradonio, president of the Northern Kentucky Visitor's Bureau, warned that loss of a hub would harm the region's tourism and hospitality industry and the 70,000 people it employs. Morgan Durrant, spokesman for US Airways, said in a phone interview after the rally that the Tempe, Ariz.-based airline was aware of rallies at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky and elsewhere. "We understand that some Delta employees probably have mixed feelings about our proposal based on what they may be hearing from management and hearing from the community," Durrant said. "But we are confident as employees of Delta understand the stability that this merger would create that they'll come to support it."

He said the airline remains committed to operating Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky as a hub although there could be some service changes. He anticipates lower fares just as has happened in a number of other markets the airline serves. As for Comair, he said it was too early in the process to say what the Erlanger-based regional carrier's status would be if the US Airways-Delta merger takes place.

"We're still on course," Durrant said. "We want to get in front of the creditors committee and conduct due diligence. That's where our focus is." The creditors committee, made up of representatives of companies the airlines owe, will make a recommendation on the merger proposal to U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Adlai Hardin, who has the final decision. Joseph Kolshak, executive vice president and chief of operations for Delta, stressed that consumers will come up short if the US Airways takeover succeeds. "Here's what's at stake for consumers and communities across the country. Stated simply: Fewer travel choices, limited service and higher fares," Kolshak said.

He said that since US Airways merged with America West last year, in every market where U.S. Airways has lowered fares, it has raised fares in four others. US Airways' fares have increased nearly twice as much as those of other legacy carriers, he said. After the presentations and a chance for people to sign an oversized petition in opposition to the takeover, Kolshak said gathering public support is important to the airline and its employees, which had similar rallies Tuesday in Atlanta; Augusta, Ga.; Boston; Charleston, W.Va.; Columbia, S.C.; Harrisburg, Pa.; Salt Lake City and Tallahassee. "I think we have to be very clear and make sure everyone realizes that this is not a good deal. It isn't a good deal for Ohio, Kentucky. It's not a good deal for Cincinnati. It's not a good deal for Delta (and) Delta people. And when you look at it globally, it's not a good deal for the traveling public," he said. He said Delta is making a case for its reorganization plan with the creditors committee in bankruptcy court, but garnering public support is also important. Stevens said the reason that residents of Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky should rally behind Delta is simple: the airport hub operation and the some 10,000 jobs it supports. He acknowledged that local passengers have a longstanding grievance with Delta over the fares it charges at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, which are among the highest in the nation. "It is obviously a situation that is something we would like to see improve, but as unhappy as we are with airfares that are higher than our competitors, we would be more unhappy if these jobs left us," Stevens said.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Anti Merger Rally's Planned in Nine Cities


Today marked an important mile stone for Delta as they submitted their Plan of Reorganization (POR) and declared their intent to remain an indepedent, strong, standalone carrier. Delta has also conculded an exhaustive review of US Air's merger proposal and concluded that their creditors, employees as well as the company’s other stakeholders, are best served by moving forward with a standalone pan
.
As Community support grows for "Keep Delta My Delta, civic leaders join employees in nine cities in support of jobs, competition, and fewer travel choices. Community leaders and Delta Air Lines people will gather to say "no" to the US Airways hostile takeover bid and share concerns about the potential negative impact this takeover could have on communities. State representatives, mayors, business leaders, and other concerned citizens are among the people scheduled to join Delta employees in Atlanta; Augusta, Ga.; Boston; Charleston, W. Va; Cincinnati; Columbia, S.C.; Harrisburg, Pa.; Salt Lake City; and Tallahassee, Fla. to sign the "Keep Delta My Delta" petition. "Keep Delta My Delta" is an employee-led grassroots campaign supporting the airline’s emergence from bankruptcy as an independent, standalone company.

Employees Show Support for "Stand Alone Delta"












See video


Delta Set To Emerge from Chapter 11 as "stand alone carrier"


See video

Memo To Doug Parker: "Thanks, but No Thanks!"


December 19, 2006
VIA FASCIMILE: 480 693 5261
Mr. W. Douglas Parker
Chairman and CEO
US Airways
4000 E. Sky Harbor Blvd.
Phoenix, AZ 85034

Dear Mr. Parker:
The Board of Directors of Delta Air Lines has unanimously rejected US Airways’ merger proposal. The Board concluded that our creditors, as well as the company’s other stakeholders, are best served by moving forward with our standalone Plan of Reorganization. Our Board of Directors considered many compelling factors during its thorough review of the US Airways proposal, and determined that our standalone Plan of Reorganization filed today will provide superior value as well as faster recovery and greater certainty of execution. Further, we concluded that your proposal is structurally flawed. It represents an unacceptably high risk of not achieving antitrust clearance because it would harm consumers and communities due to its substantial anticompetitive effects. It has overwhelming labor issues precluding attainment of claimed synergies, and depends on achieving “synergies” that are premised on faulty economic assumptions. In addition, the proposal would saddle the company with a precariously high total debt load, and reverse Delta’s progress, eroding the value of the Delta brand. Finally, US Airways continues to experience significant integration problems and has not successfully completed its prior, smaller merger with America West; it is not equipped to simultaneously integrate a substantially larger company.



The Board of Directors believes that the antitrust issues inherent in your proposal are grave, based on Department of Justice (“DOJ”) standards. Moreover, a DOJ review process would be prolonged, thus unacceptably extending the period Delta would be forced to remain in bankruptcy. In addition, the Delta unit of the Air Line Pilots Association has said – and Delta agrees – that our pilot contract would prohibit the combined company from implementing the capacity reductions that are the economic foundation of the proposed transaction.

Mr. W. Douglas Parker US Airways
December 19, 2006
Page 2



We believe that the proposal would have a demonstrably negative impact on the actual value delivered to our creditors. Your proposal radically overestimates synergies and erroneously states there is an urgent need to complete a transaction while Delta is still in bankruptcy. At the same time, it downplays the impact on employees and the traveling public, all of whom would suffer from less service and resulting higher prices to many destinations. Our vision for a fundamentally different airline that provides superior value and quality is working, as our significant progress during the year makes clear. These accomplishments – along with the strength of our brand and the resolve of our people – are the strong foundation we’re using to build further success and position Delta for intense domestic and international competition.
As part of its review, the Board concluded that Delta is better served by continuing to focus on its plan to pursue new international market and revenue opportunities from the solid base of our right-sized domestic network, a best-in-class network cost structure, and high levels of customer service. Your proposal, on the other hand, would drain or dilute both the value and quality our company has worked hard to create, including superior service levels.
For all these reasons, Delta’s Board and management have rejected the US Airways proposal.


Sincerely,
Original signed by:
Gerald Grinstein, CEO
Delta Air Lines, Inc.

Delta Files Plan of Reorganization and Rejects US Airways Hostile Bid

By Mary Schlangenstein - Bloomberg
Dec. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Delta Air Lines Inc. rejected a hostile $8.38 billion merger proposal from US Airways Group Inc. and said it planned to exit bankruptcy as an independent company with a value of as much as $12 billion. Delta's board said creditors would be better off without a merger. The US Airways offer is unlikely to receive antitrust approval, is based on flawed economic assumptions and would give Delta the largest debt load in the industry, Atlanta-based Delta, the No. 3 U.S. carrier, said in a statement.

Delta filed its five-year business strategy with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York today, 15 months after the airline sought Chapter 11 protection. The carrier said it will leave Chapter 11 in the first half of next year and forecast net income of about $500 million in 2007 and $1.2 billion in 2010. ``We will emerge as a thoroughly new Delta that will be a strong global carrier with a solid foundation for profitable growth in a highly competitive environment,'' Chief Executive Officer Jerry Grinstein said in the statement. Delta's board unanimously rejected the US Airways offer. The airline said its plan would let unsecured creditors recover 63 percent to 80 percent of their claims, and that Blackstone Group, a financial adviser, estimates the airline will be valued at $9.4 billion to $12 billion. Support from creditors, who are represented by a nine- member committee, is vital because they will help set the terms of any plan for Delta to exit bankruptcy.

Creditors' Support
``We've got a very constructive relationship with our committee,'' Delta Chief Financial Officer Ed Bastian said on a call with reporters. ``They understand the great progress Delta is making. '' Delta's shares fell 37 cents to $1.10 at 8:13 a.m. New York time in early over-the-counter trading. U.S. Airways shares fell 70 cents to $55.80 yesterday and haven't traded today.
Delta used its time under court protection to cut labor costs, ground planes and expand more-profitable international routes. The airline said today that it achieved 85 percent of the $3 billion annual cost savings goal it laid out when it filed for bankruptcy. Delta said it hasn't had any merger talks with other airlines since US Airways' offer was made public Nov. 15 following Delta's rejection of earlier, private overtures. Delta was forced to say it would consider the offer after US Airways began courting the support of Delta's creditors.
An e-mail to US Airways wasn't immediately returned today. The Tempe, Arizona-based airline offered $4 billion cash and 78.5 million shares for Delta. Creditors would own 45 percent of the combined airline.

Debt Load

Delta said today that US Airways' plan would result in a ``precariously high'' $23 billion in debt for the combined carrier, compared with $10 billion for Delta independently.
Delta was saddled with more than $28 billion in debt when it sought bankruptcy protection. It blamed growing low-cost competition, increased fuel costs and a drop in travel following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Northwest Airlines Corp. filed on the same day, in the same court, citing the same problems. US Airways came out of bankruptcy last year for a second time when it merged with America West Holdings Corp. US Airways is now the seventh-largest U.S. airline.
``US Airways was literally on the brink of liquidation'' when it agreed to merge with America West, said Jim Whitehurst, Delta's chief operating officer. ``Our cash position is strong, our financial position is strong. This situation is very different than when America West acquired US Airways.'' The case is In re Delta Air Lines Inc., 05-17923, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

Monday, December 18, 2006

US Airways May Bid Higher for Delta


By HARRY R. WEBER AP Business Writer © 2006 The Associated Press


ATLANTA — US Airways is willing to increase its $8.4 billion bid for Delta Air Lines Inc. if Delta can justify that it is worth more, an official with knowledge of US Airways' plans told The Associated Press on Monday. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks, said US Airways first needs to see how much Atlanta-based Delta values itself at in its reorganization plan, which it could file with the bankruptcy court as early as Tuesday, and whether any other airline makes a bid for Delta. US Airways is eager to get a look at Delta's books to analyze how much if at all to increase the unsolicited offer, which was first disclosed Nov. 15, the official said.


A Delta spokeswoman declined to comment Monday on the timing of when Delta will file its reorganization plan, which some observers believe could value Delta at more than US Airways' current offer. Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways Group Inc. has always "anticipated" the possibility of having to increase its offer and was not trying to buy Delta Air Lines Inc. "on the cheap," the official said. As of last week, no other carrier had offered to buy Delta since US Airways' hostile bid, and no merger discussions between Delta and any other carrier have been ongoing, the head of Delta's pilots union said Wednesday. The pilots union is a large creditor in Delta's bankruptcy case and is a member of the unsecured creditors committee, a key player in determining whether any merger would go forward. A few hours after the union chairman's comments, Delta's pilots held a rally near Atlanta to protest US Airways' bid. Nearly 3,000 people attended. Delta management also has opposed a merger. Delta's creditors committee was scheduled to meet later that day in New York to discuss the airline's proposal to remain a standalone carrier.


Last Tuesday, lawyers for the Delta creditors committee said in a bankruptcy court filing there is no guarantee that US Airways' buyout offer of Delta will ever be consummated, but it surely will fall through if the pilots' pension plan at Delta is not terminated. The committee said in court papers that its consideration of the deal is still in the early stages, but that US Airways has made clear it would walk away without the pilots' pension being dumped. The remarks were made in a filing in which the committee asked the bankruptcy court to deny a request by some retired Delta pilots to stay the court's earlier approval of the pension termination pending further appeal. A federal district judge has upheld the bankruptcy court's approval. US Airways shares fell 70 cents, or 1.2 percent, to close Monday at $55.80 on the New York Stock Exchange.

Delta to unveil reorganization plan this week


Saturday, December 16, 2006

Anti Merger Rally Brings Employees "Together"


What Can I do?










The question that many Delta people are asking is "what can I do to show my support for keeping Delta a stand alone carrier."
  • Show your support by wearing your Keep Delta My Delta t-shirts, buttons, wrist bands and lanyards - not just at work, Wear them to the grocery store, to church or to the shopping mall.

  • Sign the petition. Go to keepdeltamydelta.org and sign the petition. This is not just for Delta employees, your families, friends and even customers are encouraged to sign a petition.

  • Write your Senator and Governor.

  • Stay informed.

These are just a few ways to show your support. This is just the beginning. As David Scott (D) GA said at Wednesdays rally in Atlanta, Delta must utterly destroy the giant before them as David did some 3000 years ago. US Airways is our modern day giant and we cant back down. It will take all of our indvidual and collective efforts to send Doug Parker a message - That Dellta is not for sale...

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Delta rallying cry: 'We are not for sale!

Source: The Atlanta Journal-ConstitutionPublished on: 12/14/06

A raucous crowd of more than 3,000 Delta Air Lines workers alternately cheered, booed, clapped and hissed Wednesday as they loudly expressed opposition to a takeover bid by rival US Airways. Delta employee groups used the nearly two-hour rally to bash Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways and its CEO, Doug Parker, in pointed, personal terms. He was compared to vilified airline raiders Carl Icahn and Frank Lorenzo and even the fictional Gordon Gekko from the movie "Wall Street."

"You have underestimated your opponent!" Delta pilot union chairman Lee Moak thundered at the meeting in a convention hall near the Atlanta airport, which combined the fervor of a tent revival with the pragmatism of a political strategy session. "Go back to the desert of Arizona. Thousands of loyal Delta employees in this room are telling you that Delta is our company and we are not for sale!"
Georgia's U.S. senators, Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson, lauded the Delta workers and urged them to back management efforts to preserve Delta's history and independence.

Chambliss said he told Parker in a Washington meeting that he and other members of the Georgia delegation stoutly oppose the deal and plan hearings to pressure the Justice Department to reject it as anti-competitive.
"The proposed deal is a bad deal for Delta and we're opposed to it," Chambliss said to a standing ovation. "It's going to lead to additional mergers that aren't good for the passengers you serve." His argument may have been buttressed by reports Wednesday that United and Continental airlines are talking about a merger. Most analysts say that would be a defensive option to trump the effect of a US Airways-Delta marriage. And AirTran Airways, Atlanta's second-largest carrier behind Delta, said it's pursuing a nearly $290 million buyout of Midwest Airlines despite that carrier's initial rejection. US Airways announced its unsolicited $8.7 billion Delta bid in November, after being rebuffed in earlier private approaches. Delta executives — who did not attend Wednesday's rally — say they want to finish the carrier's Chapter 11 restructuring as an independent company.

But the airline's creditors have a big say in the outcome. They are analyzing the value and other merits of the US Airways offer and will weigh it against a Delta reorganization plan expected to be filed in bankruptcy court as soon as next week. Wednesday's quickly organized rally aimed to prove that opposition goes deeper than top management. Oversized TV screens showed film clips from Delta's humble beginnings as a crop-dusting service, along with commercials through the decades. U.S. Rep. David Scott (D-Ga.) praised Delta workers for enduring five years of pay cuts, furloughs and adversity capped by the Chapter 11 filing. He lambasted US Airways for terminating its employee pension plans during its own bankruptcy case, then aiming to take over Delta, which has announced a deal to save its main non-pilot pension plan.
"You're writing the greatest recovery story in the history of American business," Scott told the Delta workers. Scott called US Airways executives "vultures" for attempting to profit from the sacrifices of Delta workers, and said the proposed merger was "anti-competitive and anti-American."

US Airways has said it would adopt the Delta name if the merger went through but hasn't said where the combined company would be based. Many experts consider Tempe the likely choice since Parker and his lieutenants would run the airline. They previously ran Tempe-based America West Airlines, which merged with the larger US Airways and adopted its name in 2005. "How can Atlanta be Atlanta without Delta?" said 58-year-old Delta retiree Carol Kirkland, who attended the rally. "Tempe, Arizona? Come on." Moak recently held a pilot union meeting outside the former US Airways offices in Arlington, Va., to highlight what he believes would be Atlanta's fate if the deal goes forward. He said US Airways plans to expand its Tempe headquarters. "Is there any real question as to where the corporate headquarters will land?" he said. Moak also noted that Parker and his team are still at work on integrating America West and US Airways. "If you want to run an airline," he said mockingly, "why don't you start with the one you already have?"

Concern about the loss of Delta's headquarters has given management many local allies. Earlier Wednesday, the board of Central Atlanta Progress, which includes executives from some of Atlanta's top companies, passed a resolution supporting Delta's independence. Phil Gee, a spokesman for US Airways, said he isn't surprised by the emotional opposition. "It's something we definitely expected to encounter," he said. "Delta people are very passionate. You'd be hard pressed to find employees with more pride for their company than they have."
US Airways contends a merger would be a bold move to create a stronger airline — and one less vulnerable to the financial crises that overtook both US Airways and Delta in recent years. The United-Continental talks are not new, though they have become more serious since US Airways approached Delta, according to published reports. A deal remains far from certain. One big obstacle: Northwest Airlines may be able to stop it under a 2000 cross-marketing agreement with Continental.
The Wall Street Journal reported that, in addition to talks with Continental, United also has informally pitched itself to Delta as a better merger partner than US Airways if Delta or its creditors conclude a deal is unavoidable.
Kevin Mitchell, chairman of the Business Travel Coalition, said if such a "tsunami" of airline consolidation were to occur, repercussions for fliers would be disastrous, with fares rising as competition waned. "What's more, these potential transactions represent a near-term fix to the industry's difficulties and do not address systemic profitability problems and root causes," he said.
Airlines are rebounding this year, partly on the wings of cost cuts from layoffs and restructurings. But they still must battle the high cost of fuel. Many analysts believe consolidation would enable carriers to cut overlapping routes and reduce capacity, making it easier to raise fares. Others note the industry's troubled history with getting cooperation from labor groups, not to mention the difficulties of bringing different fleets, maintenance schedules and cultures under one umbrella. Said veteran airline consultant Mike Boyd: "You're dealing with a lot of emotion here that may not make sense in the light of day."
Sponsored Links

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Delta Air Lines' pilots union plans a massive rally against U.S. Airways' hostile takeover bid


12/7/2006, 6:05 a.m. CT
The Associated Press


ATLANTA (AP) — Delta Air Lines' pilots union plans a massive rally against U.S. Airways' hostile takeover bid and said it will lobby Congress to block the deal.
U.S. Airways says it won't back down, and its shares rose sharply yesterday.
The entrenched positions were voiced as Atlanta-based Delta put the finishing touches on a reorganization plan that proposes exiting Chapter Eleven as a standalone company. The plan is to be filed later this month.

The chairman of the union's executive committee, Lee Moak, said the union's governing body passed a resolution Tuesday night opposing the U.S. Airways buyout.
Delta's chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association is a member of the unsecured creditors committee that has a major role in deciding whether the buyout offer goes through. Moak said the union will hold an opposition rally near Atlanta a week from today where it hopes to gather more than a thousand pilots.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Salt Lake City Council Passes Resolution Supporting Delta Air Lines

Source: ksl.com

The Salt Lake City Council is taking a stand for what has been the state's prominent airline carrier. The council is offering support to Delta Air Lines. The bankrupt carrier is resisting a merger with US Airways. With the name change from the Delta Center to the Energy Solutions Center downtown, we are seeing the airline's presence in Salt Lake City beginning to diminish.
But imagine arriving at this terminal and not seeing any Delta signs-- no Delta widget or jet tails painted in red and blue. That's a scenario the Salt Lake City Council does not want to see happen. Last night the council unanimously passed a resolution saying the city wants Delta to reemerge from bankruptcy as a stand-alone carrier. US Airways announced its plans for a hostile takeover last month. The council has vested interest in Delta remaining an independent carrier.

Salt Lake City is Delta's major western hub, a gateway to the West of sorts as far as flight travel goes. While representatives from US Airways have said the Salt Lake hub is safe, their hub in Phoenix makes outsiders think otherwise. The resolution asked federal officials to:
"carefully scrutinize US Airways' unsolicited merger with Delta Air Lines to guard against the potential for anti-competitive behavior, to ensure a level of competition among airlines that will benefit the traveling public and to ensure that the high level of air service to Utah and the Intermountain West is continued." A Delta spokesman said the airline appreciates the city's continued support. From here the resolution, signed by Mayor Rocky Anderson, goes to the governor's office and to members of Utah's Congressional Delegation. That resolution is expected to continue to gain state support. Both congressmen Rob Bishop and Chris Cannon have released statements addressing their concerns with a US Airways takeover.

US Airways won't fight over Delta deal


USAToday 6DEC

US Airways will give up its proposed takeover of Delta Air Lines if management there can't be persuaded of the benefits, US Airways CEO Doug Parker said Tuesday. Parker said he's not prepared to fight Delta's management in bankruptcy court by submitting a merger plan to the judge without the backing of Delta officials. "We have to get to a point where we are all working together on this, or it's not going to happen," Parker said at a meeting with editors and reporters at USA TODAY. "This is all about convincing Delta's management that this plan makes sense." US Airways has made an unsolicited takeover offer of $8.5 billion in cash and stock to acquire Delta, the USA's third-biggest carrier. Delta's management has rebuffed the offer, saying it's too risky and that Delta is better off as an independent airline. Delta declined to comment on Parker's remarks. Delta CEO Gerald Grinstein has repeatedly voiced opposition to the merger proposal since US Airways announced it Nov. 15.


In a memo to employees Tuesday, Grinstein said Delta, "is making crucial progress toward becoming a strong, independent, stand-alone company." But because Delta is in bankruptcy, its management does not have complete control of the company's fate. Its creditors must approve Delta's post-bankruptcy business plan before the airline can exit. Delta executives plan to unveil the plan this month. Delta CFO Ed Bastian has expressed alarm that a merger would prolong the airline's stay in bankruptcy at least by several months because it would have to be reviewed by antitrust experts at the U.S. Department of Justice. That would increase Delta's bankruptcy costs and run the risk of a downturn in the economy or a spike in jet fuel prices, Bastian says.
Parker predicted a US Airways-Delta merger could close by June 30, 2007, roughly when Delta had predicted emerging from bankruptcy alone.


Parker called the proposed merger schedule "aggressive," but said he believes it can be done, although his airline is still working through last year's merger of America West and the old US Airways. Although that deal closed 15 months ago, the new, combined US Airways is still flying with two separate reservation systems and two sets of pilots and flight attendants who are scheduled separately and who work under separate labor contracts. Parker and US Airways President Scott Kirby said they would finish merging America West and the old US Airways before beginning a merger with Delta.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

US Air & Delta: Eye-to-eye, and so far no one has blinked

One of the first rules of Wall Street is, "never count on something that may not occur," which translates roughly as, "Don't count your chickens before they hatch." US Airways' (NYSE:LCC) $8.5B attempted hostile takeover of Delta Air Lines (NASDAQ:DALRQ) was shifted to Wall Street's "serious questions remain" category after Delta's negotiators said they were unconvinced that US Airways' offer represented the best option for cash-strapped Delta.
After a day of talks between the two companies, Delta executives indicated late Thursday that they intend to emerge from bankruptcy status as a competitive, independent, and financially sound airline by mid-2007. Delta said Thursday that its October 2006 operating loss dropped to -$88M, compared to -$301M in October 2005. A nine-member creditor committee has the final review of any bid for Delta or plan for it to exit Chapter 11 bankruptcy. (Delta is allowed to present evidence in its behalf before the committee.)

US Airways' shares dropped $0.10 to $56.66 on the news in mid-day trading Friday. Delta was down $0.06 to $1.27. Delta filed for bankruptcy in the fall 2005, after sluggish air travel demand, rising fuel costs, and most importantly, high labor benefits or "legacy" costs made it impossible compete with lower-cost carriers. Moreover, airline sector overcapacity hurt all carriers, with airline sector analysts underscoring that the sector needed to substantially reduce the number of flights offered before any meaningful recovery could occur. US Airways' pitch to Delta had been viewed as part of that necessary downsizing in the sector, and that fact, combined with an incremental but continual rise in leisure and business travel over the last 4 years, pointed to a markedly healthier airline sector.

But now Delta, its corporate morale perhaps boosted by the sector's recovery, is signaling to Wall Street that it thinks it has the operational model to survive on its own. Other analysts view Delta's response as a posture -- a stance to generate a better offer from US Airways, or perhaps from another carrier.
Source: Blogging Stocks

Monday, December 04, 2006

Takeover bid a test for Delta's savvy CEO

Source: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The last time Gerald Grinstein was running an airline and pulled it from a financial mess, he said he wanted it to remain independent. A few months later, Grinstein, then the chief executive of Los Angeles-based Western Airlines, announced an $860 million deal to merge the revived carrier with Delta Air Lines. That was 20 years ago. Now, Grinstein is running Delta. And again he says he wants it to remain a stand-alone carrier. But just as Delta's Chapter 11 recovery effort appears to be gaining strength, Grinstein's resolve for independence is again being tested. US Airways' unsolicited $8.5 billion takeover bid for Atlanta-based Delta, announced Nov. 15, dumped a sudden storm in Grinstein's flight path. To push back the bid, Grinstein needs to convince the airline's key creditors that their stake will be more valuable if it's in an independent Delta than in one being merged with US Airways.

Grinstein has not given any interviews or made public appearances since the takeover dogfight erupted. Bill Morey, who represents reservations workers before Delta's board and senior management, said he spoke with Grinstein a few hours after the US Airways announcement.
Grinstein seemed frustrated, not worried, Morey recalled. "He did say that this is something that we don't need to be dealing with right now, we are trying to get our house in order."
To fight off US Airways, Grinstein will be pushed to work every angle he's learned in his long career as a top congressional aide, lawyer, investor and chief executive. US Airways presented its offer to representatives of Delta and its creditors last week in New York. Delta will effectively make its counteroffer to the creditors when it files an independent reorganization plan, which it hopes to present before the holidays. Grinstein was apparently blindsided by US Airways' tactics. The 74-year-old twice rebuffed his 45-year-old counterpart at US Airways, Doug Parker, when the Tempe, Ariz.-based airline approached Delta privately earlier in the year.
Parker's interest didn't fade, though. US Airways executives code-named the takeover attempt "Green," the color that results from combining Delta, dubbed "Blue," with US Airways, labeled "Yellow."

Grinstein was at his home in Atlanta on the morning of Nov. 15, preparing for breakfast with his wife, when he heard a radio report about Parker's public announcement of a takeover bid —- a tactic that effectively put the issue directly in front of creditors and whipped up market enthusiasm. US Airways is offering the creditors $4 billion in cash plus US Airways stock worth the balance of the deal's value. The combined carrier would be named Delta, but Parker hasn't said where the company would be headquartered. Many Delta workers worry about what's ahead, especially after weathering years of sharp cutbacks. But US Airways' offer already appears to be far richer than what unsecured creditors got in the bankruptcies of either United Airlines or US Airways last year, according to Darryl Laddin, a bankruptcy attorney with Arnall Golden Gregory in Atlanta. Grinstein and his Delta lieutenants have a little time to review the proposal and then try to craft a proposal creditors will find better. "It really comes down to money," Laddin said. "You know the old saying: 'What have you done for me lately.' "
Dean Booth is an attorney representing retired pilots with perhaps $800 million in claims in the bankruptcy case. He's known Delta's CEO since Grinstein was a congressional aide, and he knows his powers of persuasion. "I don't think anybody with this size debt is going to base it on personality, because if charm was the issue, Jerry would win all contests," said Booth.
Creditors will try to figure out who will provide the best management in which to invest, Booth said. That's a question that doesn't include Grinstein, who is expected to retire.
"The issue everybody is going to be trying to decide is basically whose stock is worth the most," Booth said. The calculation would include not only upfront cash but also predictions about how the value of the stock in a combined company or a stand-alone Delta will fare over time. Also, creditors have to factor in the risk of federal regulators nixing the merger or forcing the sale of some operations to avoid anti-competitive concerns. Becoming a hostile takeover target apparently isn't the kind of position Grinstein intended to be in.

He fought a stressful and ultimately unsuccessful battle to keep Delta out of bankruptcy court —- a move that in hindsight gave US Airways time to complete its own stay in bankruptcy court and consummate a combination with the smaller, Parker-led America West Airlines last year.
Michael Palumbo, who was Delta's chief financial officer until just before its bankruptcy filing in September 2005, recalled that Grinstein was "absolutely committed" to Delta remaining independent. But you're "far more likely to be prey than predator when you are in the bankruptcy process," Palumbo said. After more than a year in court, painful cutbacks and a renegotiated pilot contract, clear skies seemed just ahead. Grinstein predicted Delta would exit court in the first half of 2007. Days before the US Airways announcement, Delta reported its second consecutive quarter of profits. Grinstein, an influential Delta board member who became CEO after a management shake-up in late 2003, said that after safely landing the airline he would retire and "wander off into the sunset someplace," returning to his Seattle home to dote on grandkids and indulge his passions for fly-fishing and the arts. Now, Delta officials contend that US Airways' moves may keep Delta in bankruptcy court longer.

Grinstein himself has predicted airline mergers are coming. In 2004, he mused that in five years there might be only two major national carriers left. He said he hoped one would be Delta. But more recently he's sounded a more cautious theme, noting that airline mergers are notoriously difficult and that he thinks the number of major players will remain stable for at least another couple of years. Past Delta executives and others who know Grinstein say they believe he sincerely wants to get the carrier out of bankruptcy on its own and leave his successors in a stronger position, which might allow them to consider acquisitions where Delta would be in control. When Grinstein took the Delta job, friends voiced misgivings. But Grinstein said he thought he could rescue Delta. "If I were in his shoes, I think he is thinking he wants to be the one who brings it out," said Hollis Harris, a former Delta president who later ran Continental Airlines and Air Canada. "That would be quite an achievement for him." Morey, the worker representative on Delta's board, said Delta's chief will fight the takeover of an airline he feels so close to and sees so much value in: "There's no way that Jerry Grinstein would give up Delta."
Morey worked for the old Western Airlines when Grinstein merged it with Delta, a decision that Morey sees as an entirely different situation. Delta is still in bankruptcy court. Grinstein had successfully pulled Western out of financial turmoil through deals with its unions. He had told reporters he preferred to keep Western independent and even spoke of the carrier's board considering possible anti-takeover measures. But he also hinted at the difficulty of Western flying alone as other airlines grew bigger. In 1986, he announced the deal to combine with Delta. It turned out to be a relatively smooth pairing, as airline mergers go.

"This is a model of what mergers ought to be," Grinstein said at the time, according to the Los Angeles Times. "It's a strengthening of what both companies should be competitively."
Grinstein has been on the Delta board ever since, even as he led railroad giant Burlington Northern, which he eventually merged with Santa Fe Pacific. He's said to feel a deep bond with Delta's workers, including former Western employees. Nonetheless, Morey —- who thinks the US Airways deal is a bad idea —- predicts Grinstein won't let his soft spot for Delta get in the way of his fiduciary duties to the airline's creditors. "As awful as the things he's had to decide to do in this bankruptcy, he is not going to let his heart sway him in what needs to be done in a business situation," Morey said. Laddin, who represented the trustee in Eastern Airlines' bankruptcy case, said Delta is at a fork in the road. If the airline and creditors wind up in negotiations with US Airways, Delta could attract other suitors. "If they entertain a bidding process, my guess is that there is no going back," Laddin said. "The process would gain sufficient momentum with bidding increasing the price that it would be very difficult" for Delta to remain independent. Either way, for Grinstein and for Delta the drama is still unfolding. "The US Airways offer isn't the end of the story," Laddin said. "It's more like the beginning."
THE BATTLE FOR DELTA

How Delta or US Airways wins:
> Lobby unsecured creditors. Focus on the value of bankruptcy payouts as well as deeper financial stakes each creditor has. The Delta pilots group—-a major creditor —- could consider whether a combined or stand-alone company would retain more Delta pilot jobs. Equipment and plane suppliers could consider which entity will be a better future customer and which scenario might be the best for the airline industry.

> Lobby federal regulators. Persuade regulators or powerful congressional leaders to hint at whether they see antitrust problems with a combined Delta-US Airways. That could affect creditors' confidence in the deal going through.

> Win support of Delta bondholders, some of whom may be betting on short-term gains.

> Win in the court of public opinion. Persuade influential players and pundits to speak publicly about the proposal or airline mergers in general. Rally support from employees and fliers or foment discontent among the other airline's employees and customers.

POSSIBLE LEGAL MOVES
> Delta could convince its bankruptcy judge that US Airways' offer violates management's exclusivity period for producing a reorganization plan. But even if Delta succeeds, it might only be a delaying tactic, dragging out its bankruptcy case.

> US Airways could persuade creditors to ask the judge to put an early end to Delta's exclusivity period for presenting a reorganization plan, allowing consideration of its competing plan.

US Airways, Delta launch PR battle in attempted takeover

Source USA Today
12/4/06

By Marilyn Adams, USA TODAY

Delta Air Lines' creditors and a bankruptcy judge will decide whether US Airways buys Delta, but that isn't stopping both airlines from battling for public opinion.
Both airlines have hired big names in the financial public relations business to help shape the views of Wall Street analysts, airline employees and airline customers as well as the creditors and judges. US Airways hired New York communications firm Joele Frank, Wilkinson Brimmer Katcher. Delta is using Kekst and Co., a large New York financial PR firm with longstanding ties to the airline.

In a surprise announcement Nov. 15, US Airways publicly offered Delta's bankruptcy creditors $8 billion in stock and cash for Delta, which is in Chapter 11. Delta's management has rebuffed the offer. The unveiling was well-orchestrated. That morning, US Airways' PR team, along with a team from Joele Frank, placed predawn phone calls to dozens of reporters and Wall Street analysts to alert them to an 8:15 a.m. conference call with CEO Doug Parker.
A new electronic newsletter, For the Record, now spins every small development in the pending deal in the most favorable light to US Airways.

"They do aggressive financial PR, and they are very good at it," US Airways Senior Vice President Elise Eberwein said of the Joele Frank firm. Frank could not be reached.
Meanwhile, Delta bought a full-page advertisement opposing the merger in its hometown newspaper, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. And at the urging of its own employees, Delta ordered and distributed 50,000 red "Keep Delta My Delta" lapel buttons. US Airways has scheduled meetings with influential newspaper editorial boards.
Experts on the PR industry say it's common in hostile takeovers for the pursuer and pursued to hire specialized PR firms. PR Week reporter Hamilton Nolan says the firms know their audiences, and the stakes.

"They ask: 'What's the message to the creditors, to the media, to analysts, to customers, to shareholders?' All those groups get targeted messages." Not all PR is for public consumption, however. Right after last month's announcement, Delta placed countless private phone calls to its unsecured creditors to argue that a merger would be risky and that Delta is better off alone.
The takeover fight between Delta and US Airways won't be over anytime soon. Delta hopes to show creditors its business plan as a stand-alone airline later this month. Michael Freitag, the Kekst partner overseeing the Delta account, says financial PR is a long-term project. Delta's efforts to win support from all its crucial constituents "is a marathon, not a sprint."

Delta too valuable to city for merger to fly

The following article was written by Shirley Franklin, Mayor of Atlanta and was published in the AJC Opinion page. She makes a great case for Delta remaining a stand alone carrier and also talks about Delta's tremendous value to the city of Atlanta.


By SHIRLEY FRANKLIN Published on: 12/04/06

Two weeks ago, US Airways proposed an $8 billion takeover of Delta Air Lines, despite the fact that Delta has previously rebuffed similar suggestions. Atlanta is a city that has gained international prominence due in part to the presence of the world's busiest airport — an airport in which Delta is the major player. As mayor of Atlanta, I strongly oppose the proposed merger. I support Delta's stated desire to remain autonomous as it emerges from bankruptcy. US Airways suggests it has a remedy for the issue of creating a monopoly. But higher consumer cost would not be the only problem of such a merger. Customer service might suffer as well. US Airways ranks far lower than Delta in practically every important customer service metric, including the overall JD Power customer service ratings.

Delta has a tradition and reputation of customer service from the heart for the past 77 years. This city, state and region, home to Delta's hub, could also suffer adverse affects from this merger because the headquarters could move out of Atlanta. Almost half of Delta's employees, 25,000 people, reside in Georgia. We could lose all the jobs related to supporting the business Delta brings to metro Atlanta, including hotels, restaurants, rental cars, and tourism. Delta's annual economic impact exceeds $12 billion and supports 70,000 jobs. Delta's incredible commitment to hometown civic and charitable causes in financial terms and in volunteerism make an indelible mark on our community. With the removal of Delta 's headquarters and the potential impact on Delta's hub, Atlanta and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport would lose its crown jewel. The city, state and region would lose a valued presence that has helped shape all that we know and love about Atlanta.

Atlanta and Georgia gains tremendously with Delta's emergence from bankruptcy as a stand-alone airline serving the region, nation and the world's travelers. Join me in supporting Delta by letting your voice be heard in the media and in Congress.

What's Really At Stake

From the Delta Board Council:

What’s at stake for Delta employees us in this fight?

Let’s be clear, it is US Airways, not Delta, that needs this merger. Delta people will not be Doug Parker’s golden parachute or ticket to fame and fortune as Delta’s next CEO. So what’s at stake?
· USAirways has said it will pull down capacity by 10%. While they say they would try to avoid furloughs (it will be handled primarily through “attrition”), there clearly would be job reductions commensurate with the pull down of capacity.

· USAirways is not known for compensating its employees well. We are on the verge of emerging from bankruptcy with commitments of increased pay, profit sharing and a possible equity stake. We stand to lose these commitments in a takeover.

· USAirways dumped all of their pension plans. We were successful in passing legislation to keep ours. They have a different culture.

· USAirways does not have medical benefits for retirees. Delta and the 1114 committees just completed securing medical benefits for Delta retirees. These could be at risk.

· The turmoil of a significantly longer time in bankruptcy plus the integration of such disparate workforces and cultures is not a price we need to pay to help USAirways save itself.

What can I do?

Here are some things you can do between now and January 5, the end of the Congressional holiday recess.

Continue to wear Keep Delta My Delta items. By doing so, we are declaring to everyone, in a highly visible and unified way, that we are fighting this together. This is extremely important to our loyal customers who want to join the fight and who will be catalyzed by our unity and energy.
Your Congressional representatives will be home from December 7 through January 5. Attend any Town Hall meetings near you and let your representatives know how you feel about USAirways' take over attempt. Ask them for their position. Do the same at any meetings or events your state legislators or city officials may attend.
You can write a letter to your Congressional representatives. Simply draft your own letter based on how you feel a USAirways takeover of Delta will affect you, our customers and Delta.
Stay informed by reading the information we will continue to post on the KDMD website. The link is on the DeltaNet, your divisional and the Retiree Connection home pages.
Send us your ideas and feedback via the KDMD or DBC web sites.

Lastly, your role in all of this as a Delta employee dedicated to Keep Delta My Delta is to insure that every action you take on behalf of all Delta people is done with one goal in mind: to serve our customers to the best of your ability and insure that every flight, for every customer solidifies that Delta is their absolute airline of choice. The Keep Delta My Delta campaign is a call to provide the absolute best customer experience possible. Every customer lost because of me or a fellow employee is one fewer soldier to help us fight this fight.

Our unity is in stark contrast to the fractured, contentious work environment of US Airways and will be used as a factor in valuing our company. A clean, on-time airline with inviting employees dedicated to winning the tiebreakers clearly delivers more value than a dysfunctional airline that is fractured and misaligned.

Our Keep Delta My Delta campaign is not only about active Delta people. It is about our customers who have come to rely on Delta as their airline of choice, the communities we serve, the businesses to whom Delta is a lifeline, our steadfast commitment to our military as Delta is the absolute preferred CRAF carrier for our troops, and for the retirees on whose shoulders our great company was built. This fight is ours to win. This is but the first step in our plan of action; stay tuned there is more to come.

Until then, thank you for your unity of purpose and rekindling of the true Delta Spirit.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Delta meets US Air, but plans no merger

Source: Economic Times
Saturday, December 2nd


NEW YORK: Delta Air Lines said it listened to a presentation by US Airways Group on US Airways’ $8.5 billion takeover offer for Delta, but repeated earlier statements that it intends to emerge from bankruptcy as a stand-alone carrier. US Airways, which pitched its plan to Delta’s senior management and creditor committee representatives on Thursday, said in a separate statement that it was pleased to have had the chance to discuss its proposal. It was US Airways’ first opportunity to speak directly to Delta’s official committee of unsecured creditors since launching its offer on November 15. It was not clear whether the parties would meet again to take US Airways’ unsolicited bid for its larger rival further. Delta was legally obliged to review the bid. “While we will fulfil this obligation, we will, as we have stated, continue to progress toward filing our stand-alone plan by the end of the year, which would have us emerge from bankruptcy as a highly competitive, independent and financially sound airline by mid-2007,”


Delta said after the meeting. Atlanta-based Delta has been recalling pilots and flight attendants to work this year as it expands internationally and restructures operations. Its monthly loss in October narrowed year-over-year, helped by lower costs. Delta’s pilots’ union, represented on the creditor committee, has expressed concerns about the offer. US Airways has argued that a combined airline would have more benefits than a stand-alone Delta. “We are confident that our proposal for a ‘new’ Delta will create more value than a stand-alone plan,” said US Airways CEO Doug Parker, in a statement after the meeting. US Airways has won some backing for its plan from Delta bondholders. An ad hoc group of bondholders, organised last week, aims to put pressure on Delta to fully consider the US Airways bid, a person familiar with the matter has said. The group, which was not present at Thursday’s meeting, is planning separate meetings with Delta and US Airways, Alan Kornberg of law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, said. The firm represents the bondholder group. Meanwhile, US airline AirTran Holdings chairman and CEO Joe Leonard said he is interested in acquiring airport gates sold by US Airways or Delta Air Lines if those carriers merge, The Wall Street Journal reported. Mr Leonard said discount carrier Air-Tran, would consider buying jettisoned shuttle operations as a way to gain access to gates at New York’s LaGuardia International Airport and Washington's Reagan National Airport.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Grass Roots Effort Off and Running

The grass roots effort to fend off US Air's hostile bid for Delta Air Lines is off and running. Thousands of Delta Employees worldwide can be seen wearing their "Keep Delta My Delta" buttons and wrist bands, but it doesn't stop there. Soon busses in Atlanta that serve as transportation from Hartsfield International Airport will also express the company's desire to remain a stand alone carrier as they emerge from bankruptcy early next year. While morale at Delta has been up and down since filing for Chapter 11 in September of 2005, it's clear from the overwhelming support from employee groups that the pride of Delta Air Lines is alive and well. One employee said "I will not sit by and let US Air reap the benefits for my hard work and sacrifice - not on my watch. That kind of passion has united Delta emplyoees across the board. Even Delta's pilots have been vocal in support of the company's stand alone plan.

The two sides were at odds earlier this year over Delta's effort to implement a second round of pay cuts but US Airways' $8.9 billion bid to buy Delta has put Delta management and its pilots union on the same side again in opposing the unsolicited offer. "We have a common threat from outside Delta Air Lines," the chairman of the pilots union's executive committee, Lee Moak, said Wednesday. Moak told fellow pilots in a memo Tuesday that "should this merger be as misguided and as poor an idea as I currently believe it to be, then I will deploy every available resource to stop it."

Today Delta reported that it narrowed its loss in October to $88 million which equates to 45 cents a share in the 31-day period and was smaller than its loss of $301 million for the same month last year. Excluding reorganization items, Delta said its latest loss was $64 million and shows further evidence that their plan is working.




Source: Delta Air Lines, Inc.

Statement on Behalf of Delta Air Lines Following Presentation by US Airways
ATLANTA, Nov. 30, 2006 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) (PRIMEZONE) -- Delta Air Lines today issued the following statement:


"Consistent with our obligation to review US Airways' unsolicited proposal, today we, along with representatives of our Creditors' Committee, met to listen to US Airways' presentation concerning US Airways' proposal to merge with Delta.
"While we will fulfill this obligation, we will, as we have stated, continue to progress toward filing our stand-alone plan by the end of the year, which would have us emerge from bankruptcy as a highly competitive, independent and financially sound airline by mid-2007. Our plan is working and we have tremendous, hard-won confidence in it."

Delta Air Lines (Other OTC:DALRQ) offers customers service to more destinations than any global airline with Delta and Delta Connection carrier service to 290 destinations in 46 countries. With more than 50 new international routes added in the last year, Delta is America's fastest growing international airline and is a leader across the Atlantic with flights to 28 trans-Atlantic destinations. To Latin America and the Caribbean, Delta offers more than 400 weekly flights to 49 destinations. Delta's marketing alliances also allow customers to earn and redeem SkyMiles on more than 14,000 flights offered by SkyTeam and other partners. Delta is a founding member of SkyTeam, a global airline alliance that provides customers with extensive worldwide destinations, flights and services. Including its SkyTeam and worldwide codeshare partners, Delta offers flights to 445 worldwide destinations in 92 countries. Customers can check in for flights, print boarding passes and check flight status at delta.com.