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Lufthansa, pilots reach agreement through arbitration

By Kurt Hofmann and Aaron Karp | June 29, 2010

Lufthansa and its pilots represented by the Vereinigung Cockpit union last week reached agreement on a new labor contract through federal arbitration, ending a year-long dispute that included a brief walkout by flight deck crew earlier this year.

The one-day pilot strike in February cost LH around €48 million ($59.4 million) as it was forced to cancel 2,000 flights. The union threatened further action before agreeing to arbitration in April. LH and VC, representing the carrier's 4,000 pilots, agreed to accept terms put forward by arbitrator Klaus von Dohnanyi.

LH said the sides agreed to a salary freeze that will keep pilots' current pay in place through at least March 31, 2011. The union said it accepted the freeze "to ensure Lufthansa's future competitiveness."

In addition, the accord allows LH to operate regional aircraft with up to 95 seats outside the terms of the pilot contract. The previous contract set a 70-seat-aircraft limit. "Under this ruling, more than a fifth of the smallest aircraft in the fleet can be operated by regional carriers outside the terms of the group pay agreement," LH said. "This ensures sustainable development perspectives in the Group's regional traffic segment."

The two sides also agreed "on the minimum level of traffic to be flown by pilots of Lufthansa passenger aircraft in cross-border traffic between the markets of carriers in the Lufthansa airline group," LH said. "On Lufthansa Italia, they reached a solution which will enable the regional airline's ongoing development under country-specific working conditions." VC members still need to formally approve the pact in a vote.

http://atwonline.com/airline-financ...lots-reach-agreement-through-arbitration-0628
 
Lufthansa, pilots reach agreement through arbitration

By Kurt Hofmann and Aaron Karp | June 29, 2010

Lufthansa and its pilots represented by the Vereinigung Cockpit union last week reached agreement on a new labor contract through federal arbitration, ending a year-long dispute that included a brief walkout by flight deck crew earlier this year.

The one-day pilot strike in February cost LH around €48 million ($59.4 million) as it was forced to cancel 2,000 flights. The union threatened further action before agreeing to arbitration in April. LH and VC, representing the carrier's 4,000 pilots, agreed to accept terms put forward by arbitrator Klaus von Dohnanyi.

LH said the sides agreed to a salary freeze that will keep pilots' current pay in place through at least March 31, 2011. The union said it accepted the freeze "to ensure Lufthansa's future competitiveness."

In addition, the accord allows LH to operate regional aircraft with up to 95 seats outside the terms of the pilot contract. The previous contract set a 70-seat-aircraft limit. "Under this ruling, more than a fifth of the smallest aircraft in the fleet can be operated by regional carriers outside the terms of the group pay agreement," LH said. "This ensures sustainable development perspectives in the Group's regional traffic segment."

The two sides also agreed "on the minimum level of traffic to be flown by pilots of Lufthansa passenger aircraft in cross-border traffic between the markets of carriers in the Lufthansa airline group," LH said. "On Lufthansa Italia, they reached a solution which will enable the regional airline's ongoing development under country-specific working conditions." VC members still need to formally approve the pact in a vote.

ATWOnline
 
Intanto LH Italia inaugura finalmente il suo sito e la prima community italiana di LH, cioè WeFly. :p :cool:

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On line il sito ufficiale di Lufthansa Italia
E per festeggiare domani e giovedì biglietti in promozione


E’ online www.lufthansaitalia.com, il sito ufficiale di Lufthansa Italia, in lingua italiana e inglese. La compagnia, fino ad ora presente sul sito istituzionale lufthansa.com, lancia il proprio sito internet e celebra l’inaugurazione con una speciale promozione. Il 14 e il 15 luglio si potranno prenotare i voli verso le destinazioni italiane ed europee servite da Lufthansa Italia in partenza da Milano Malpensa, a prezzi scontati per partenze comprese tra il 14 luglio 2010 e il 31 maggio 2011. La promozione è valida esclusivamente per biglietti acquistati on line sul sito www.lufthansaitalia.com nelle giornate del 14 e 15 luglio.
I contenuti di ciascuna categoria – “Prenotare e programmare”, “Offerte e idee”, Le mie prenotazioni”, “Informazioni & Servizi” e “Miles and More” – sono tutti accessibili da ciascuna pagina mentre le singole sotto categorie sono selezionabili grazie ad un menu a cascata. Sul sito di Lufthansa Italia è inoltre possibile prenotare anche tutti i voli Lufthansa per le destinazioni del network globale. Dalla homepage di Lufthansa Italia è inoltre possibile accedere a WeFly, la prima community di Lufthansa in Italia.

http://www.guidaviaggi.it/detail.lasso?id=122631&-session=givi:970F98D61168e27365JMl1BABD1D

www.lufthansaitalia.com
 
Dopo la risoluzione del problema coi sindacati tedeschi e lo sblocco delle assunzioni arriva il nuovo sito dedicato a LHI, speriamo che il prossimo passo sia il tanto atteso AOC
 
Offerta Family & Friends per Lufthansa Italia.com

Lufthansa Italia festeggia il proprio sito con una offerta speciale : solo il 14 ed il 15 luglio puoi comprare ad un prezzo incredibile per viaggiare con la famiglia o gli amici

2 persone 79€*
3 persone 119€*
4 persone 149€*
5 persone 179€*

* a tratta

quindi voli a/r a partire da 72€ tutto incluso
 
Lufthansa Italia consolidates its position at Milan Malpensa


This article is a part of this publication...

Lufthansa Italia this month announced plans to launch frequent (up to daily) services from Milan’s Malpensa Airport to Catania (Sicily) and Prague from 01-Nov-2010, using A319s. These are not easy routes on which to win business with considerably more offered on the Catania route from Alitalia’s Air One subsidiary, Windjet and easyJet, and to Prague from CSA and easyJet. Less than two years after Lufthansa’s interest in taking over the ailing Alitalia fizzled out when Air France purchased a stake, prompting Lufthansa to set up its own new brand, Lufthansa Italia, at Milan, what are the prospects now for Lufthansa’s first new airline that it had set up in a foreign market?

At the time Lufthansa Italia was instigated, the fact that Alitalia had reduced its presence in the Milan market (Italy’s commercial capital) as a result of its financial difficulties was viewed by the German flag carrier as one of the best opportunities further to gain market share in Europe. Previously, it wanted its 100% Italian regional airline subsidiary Air Dolomiti to take on the task. As the Lufthansa Italia CEO, Heike Birlenbach stated at the time, “Milan is a strategic market: the population in the area reaches over 10 million and the city is one of the wealthiest in Italy as it is the financial and business capital of the country.” At the time Lufthansa was carrying some five million passengers a year from and to Italy, one of its largest markets in Europe after Germany.

Big money originating from business gives to the whole Lombardy region – with Milan as its capital - a powerful tool to influence economic decisions. With Italy’s embattled national carrier Alitalia consolidating its core activities in Rome, Milanese people felt increasingly frustrated. “There is an enormous potential for point-to-point destinations out of Milan, especially as the Milanese are very reluctant to transit today via Rome or Paris to reach the rest of the world,” added Ms Birlenbach.

Alitalia gave its support to Lufthansa to move into the market, as did the Lombardy regional government, which sees Lufthansa Italia as the unofficial new ‘home carrier’ for the region. Indeed, right from the start Lombardy has had ambitions to see further development and quickly asked Lufthansa to boost frequencies and routes.

The initial fleet was of six 138-seat A319s, quickly increasing to nine – one of them wet-leased from bmi - and airport facilities were improved by the airline. Non-stop flights were offered to eight European cities and three domestic ones (Bari, Naples and Rome), offering 180 frequencies per week with some 35,000 seats. The focus was on the needs of business travellers, especially punctuality, and average load factor of 60% was quickly achieved.

Coffee and pasta
A sensitive point was how to sell a “German” airline to an Italian audience, which has a reputation for being somewhat fussy, if not nationalistic. Lufthansa attempted to solve the issue by adding Italian ‘flair.’ Specific uniforms were designed by an Italian company, and the airline added a new logo with Italian colours. Onboard, typical Italian dishes were served as it was recognised that Italian passengers’ tastes are different, even down to serving real espresso coffee on short haul flights. ‘Copy and paste’ was not considered an option; coffee and pasta was.

The airline first used German-based staff and aircraft registered in Germany, but immediately sought to gain an Italian AOC with the aim of hiring Italian staff. That was achieved in 2010, and helped position itself in the market in its own right as an Italian carrier, differentiating itself from the parent company. Even taking all these measure into account though, the airline was initially slow to gain respectability in the market, prompting LI to reconsider the message it was communicating to its target audience. Even now one could argue that not having a stand-alone website but having the Lufthansa logo draped all over the Lufthansa website embedded reservation pages does not help its cause. It does not even offer a basic ‘about us’ page.

Lufthansa Italia currently flies to Barcelona, Budapest, Bucharest, Lisbon, London, Paris, Madrid, Casablanca, Ibiza, Stockholm and Warsaw internationally plus Bari, Naples, Olbia and Palermo domestically, before Nov-2010’s additions of Prague and Catania.


Source: Lufthansa corporate website

But it conceded defeat, at least as far as Malpensa is concerned, in its efforts to compete on the key Milan-Rome link against the Alitalia – Air One monopoly that connects Milan's smaller but downtown and more convenient Linate Airport with Rome’s possibly not so convenient primary airport, Fiumicino. It suspended its Malpensa-Rome service in Feb-2010 in favour of pressing for Linate route rights instead. Ms Birlenbach considers it “difficult” to sell the Rome route out of Malpensa.

Alitalia’s earlier reduction of its presence on the Milan – Rome route had been a major influence on the decision to base the Lufthansa Italia product there. But that policy has not quite worked out and it failed to penetrate Alitalia’s core market. Another problem facing Lufthansa Italia, Alitalia, and Italian airlines generally is the dramatic increase in high-speed rail services, both domestically and internationally through connections with other rail operators – a predicament that airlines in countries as diverse as France, the UK and China are currently facing up to.

Transit passengers in abundance, long haul next?
For that reason the fact that transfer passengers represent 15% to 20% of total traffic is good news to Lufthansa Italia, which is now looking to regional partners to serve smaller markets as it experiences a surge in those transit passengers. Notwithstanding such co-operation the fleet could go to 12 aircraft in the near future. In the longer term, Lufthansa Italia could even fly long-haul. Ms Birlenbach stated, “We have already been solicited by Lombardy. There are no plans for the time being but this is certainly an option we are considering.”

For now it operates a three-pillar’ route strategy comprising: enhancing the current network and improving slots; enhancing the domestic network; potentially serving more leisure destinations with flights to the Mediterranean and some destinations in North Africa and the Canary Islands.

As things stand, LI and easyJet are the largest scheduled operators at Malpensa; an unusual situation with one being a regional division of a legacy carrier and the other an LCC (of sorts).

The economic crisis certainly impacted on the carrier’s business plan, but Ms Birlenbach remains convinced that it took the right decision to launch in 2009, if only because it showed the Lombardy region that one of the world’s largest airlines had faith in it and was prepared to make the commitment, which can only gain it kudos amongst the local population in the long term.

In fact, it is an experiment that Lufthansa has the opportunity to replicate elsewhere in Europe where there is still a demand for legacy airline services, but the responsible flag carrier is failing to provide the supply to match.


http://www.centreforaviation.com/ne...olidates-its-position-at-milan-malpensa/page1
 
Sarebbe davvero interessante se venisse scelta EN per feederare MXP da aeroporti italiani come per esempio VCE/TRS/GOA...anche se MUC assolve al momento il ruolo di HUB naturale per il Triveneto.
 
The airline first used German-based staff and aircraft registered in Germany, but immediately sought to gain an Italian AOC with the aim of hiring Italian staff. That was achieved in 2010, and helped position itself in the market in its own right as an Italian carrier, differentiating itself from the parent company. Even taking all these measure into account though, the airline was initially slow to gain respectability in the market, prompting LI to reconsider the message it was communicating to its target audience. Even now one could argue that not having a stand-alone website but having the Lufthansa logo draped all over the Lufthansa website embedded reservation pages does not help its cause. It does not even offer a basic ‘about us’ page.


Scusate, qui sembra che l'AOC l'abbia già ottenuto!! :O
 
Penso intendano che hanno gia' assunto personale italiano.
 
Dovrebbe arrivare a breve,non appena i primi piloti firmeranno il contratto lufthansa italia. Il coa è previsto entro la fine dell'anno.Così ci hanno detto ieri durante l'info day di lhi a malpensa.
 
Dovrebbe arrivare a breve,non appena i primi piloti firmeranno il contratto lufthansa italia. Il coa è previsto entro la fine dell'anno.Così ci hanno detto ieri durante l'info day di lhi a malpensa.


Visto che ci sei stato, si è detto qualcosa di interessante?quando iniziano i primi?
 
guarda dovrebbero iniziare a ottobre cn il type e iniziare a volare a gennaio.contano di formare 4 FO al mese da affiancare a comandanti tedeschi,con possibilità di passare al comando dopo due anni.Poi hanno detto che nel tempo vorrebbero arrivare a 15 o 18 aerei mi sembra ma che questo dipende da LH e da in quanto tempo possono mandargli altri aerei.
 
Dovrebbe arrivare a breve,non appena i primi piloti firmeranno il contratto lufthansa italia. Il coa è previsto entro la fine dell'anno.Così ci hanno detto ieri durante l'info day di lhi a malpensa.

Domanda stupida ma per ottenere il coa è obbligatorio che gli equipaggi o almeno una certa percentuale minima siano italiani?
 
Sarebbe davvero interessante se venisse scelta EN per feederare MXP da aeroporti italiani come per esempio VCE/TRS/GOA...anche se MUC assolve al momento il ruolo di HUB naturale per il Triveneto.

Proprio a questo punto si inseriscono bene i rumors di fusione tra AirDolomiti e LHI dando vita a un unica controllata italiana di LH, riducendo i costi e aumentando le sinergie.
 
Ultima modifica:
Proprio a questo punto si interiscono bene i rumors di fusione tra AirDolomiti e LHI dando vita a un unica controllata italiana di LH, riducendo i costi e aumentando le sinergie.
Non mi pare una grande idea, anche se bisognerebbe capire quale scopo avrebbe la nuova entita' italiana.
Quasi tutte le major hanno compagnie regional ad hoc, sia quelle EU che quelle US, Air Dolomiti e' una regional con un nome, un network e una struttura che funziona per feederare gli HUB tedesci da aeroporti minori, mentre LHI e' un PtP che NON puo' volare in Germania ed e' basato in un aeroporto intercontinentale. Inoltre la flotta e' completamente diversa e faccio fatica a vedere sinergie che vadano al di la' di quelle che gia' si hanno sfruttando la controllante tedesca.
 
potrebbero creare un unica "entita" idonea al famoso feederaggio tanto caro a SEA.. a questo punto non ci sarebbero piu controindicazioni per LHI ad aprire il lungo raggio che sarebbe ora venisse aperto. Su mxp oggi ci non troppi vettori che effettuano il corto/medio raggio sia nazionale che internazionale.. Con la winter come dice l amico Caldi qualcuno rischia di farsi veramente male con yeld bassisimi e con la concorrenza agguerrita degli arancioni. La soluzione fusione alla fine non mi pare cosi fuori dal mondo si avrebbe una sola compagnia un solo Coa gia bello e pronto.. quello di air dolomiti. La flotta sarebbe composta da atr per il feederaggio embraer e a319 per corto medio raggio. Non mi sembra poi cosi male la cosa. Si potrebbero riaprire venezia, Trieste pisa ancora e perugia con atr mentre bologna e firenze potrebbero essere tranquillamente alimentate magari cn l alta velocita di Montezemolo. Sul fronte sud si dovrebbero intensificare catania palermo bari e napoli, magari aprire cagliari e lamezia e alla fine con un sistema di alimentazione valido aprire il lungo raggio cn 3/4 wide body tipo a330 Francamente non la vedo un' impresa cosi titanica ci vuole si un po di coraggio ma la teutonica caparbieria secondo me porterebbe nel tempo buoni frutti.
 
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