
"It's hard for us to fathom," said Terry Trippler, an industry expert who runs travel Web site cheapseats.com. "It's difficult for the airline employees. It's difficult for the average Joe consumer."
In Delta's case, the airline wants an arbitration panel to throw out its pilot contract so it can impose up to $325 million in long-term cuts on its 6,000 pilots. A decision is expected by April 15. The pilots union says it will strike if its contract is voided. Other Delta employees also have taken deep pay cuts over the last year or two.
Delta's lead bankruptcy lawyer, Marshall Huebner, said it's understandable that some people are perplexed by the size of the professional fees.
But, he said, "Restructuring is expensive, especially a restructuring of this size. But the work we are doing is critical to return Delta to financial viability."
It should be noted that even if the bills continue at the rate so far through their exit from Chapter 11, the projected total for the two airlines combined could be $276 million. That would still be lower than the $335 million UAL Corp.'s United Airlines spent on its bankruptcy case during the 38 months it was in Chapter 11.
Northwest has said it hopes to finish its reorganization plan by the end of this year. Delta has said it hopes to emerge from bankruptcy in the summer of 2007.
The court has the final say on what lawyers will get paid, and in some cases they are only given 80 percent of their expenses and fees up front and have to come back for the rest later.
William Whitford, a law professor at the University of Wisconsin who has studied the issue, said more could be done to police the expenses charged by bankruptcy attorneys and consultants.
"They have an incentive, these big firms, to send these lower lawyers off to the library to write this memo and that memo because every memo they write, the law firm is making a profit," he said. Many of those help the debtor's case, he said. But some probably aren't.
"That's where all the gray areas of judgment are, and it's very hard for the process to police," he said.
For instance, one law firm billed Northwest $130 for long-distance faxes, at $1.25 per page. It charged 10 cents for each photocopy, adding up to $17,309. It billed more than $183,000 for online research.
Billing records show 59 lawyers from Bruce Zirinsky's law firm alone working on the Northwest case. Zirinsky himself so far has logged 706.8 hours at $800 an hour. That added up to $565,440 in 3 1/2 months. Zirinsky did not return a phone call seeking comment on the fees.
Continue Reading this Story at WCCO-TV Minneapolis- St. Paul



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