Major airline CEOs ‘are to blame’ for worker shortages, SEIU president says

In This Article:

Service Employees International Union (SEIU) International President Mary Kay Henry joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss staffing shortages across the airline industry, potential strike action, and summer travel demand.

Video Transcript

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- As the summer vacation boom takes hold, airport workers are ramping up the pressure on airlines to improve wages, benefits, and working conditions. Joining us now to discuss is Mary Kay Henry, Service Employees International Union president. Mary Kay, good to see you here this morning. So it goes without saying airports are big places. Within an airport, where are-- where is it most pressing that workers get pay increases right now? And by how much?

MARY KAY HENRY: Well, service workers that handle bags, clean cabins, move seniors and people with disabilities in wheelchairs from the gate to the curb, those are workers who are earning $8 an hour with no benefits and no guaranteed hours and who served us throughout the entire pandemic. And in places where the airlines have recognized unions and have bargained wages, a wheelchair attendant in Chicago is earning $18 an hour this month in July while the same attendant in Dallas is earning $8 an hour. And so workers are joining together and demanding higher wages and accountability from the corporations who've received billions in federal taxpayer throughout the pandemic to ensure that the traveling public has stable service from workers who can afford to feed their families.

- Mary Kay, $8, that is ridiculous.

MARY KAY HENRY: It is ridiculous.

- I couldn't even believe that when you just told it to me. Well, who's to blame for that? Who is holding worker wages back in this place?

MARY KAY HENRY: Well, think about the profitability of the airlines pre-pandemic and then the $60 billion that happened in the first investment in '21 and then again, most recently this year in '22. And I think the CEOs of the major airlines American, Delta, and United are to blame. They have to make a decision to not play by the old rules, but to recognize the new moment that we're in and to address the worker shortage by investing in living wage jobs where people can join together in unions.

- Which airports are you taking this fight to, kind of just head-on right now? Because when we think about the delays, especially, and where those workers are actually being paid and what they're being paid, especially with the amount of delays and cancellations that do take place, that means even more volume, even more people that they've got to make sure that they're interfacing with correctly and providing data on a day-in and day-out basis.