American Airlines CEO Tom Horton to land $20 million severance
BY DAVID KOENIG Associated Press
Saturday, February 16, 2013
2/16/13 at 4:30 AM
Find all the stories, photos, videos and a timeline about Tulsa’s largest employer.Original Print Headline: AMR CEO to get $20M severance
FORT WORTH - Tom Horton won't get to lead the new American Airlines after it merges with US Airways, but he'll get a going-away prize of nearly $20 million.
Horton will get $9.94 million in cash and an equal amount in stock in the new company after the merger. He'll also get an office and office help for two years, and lifetime flight and travel benefits.
American's parent company, AMR Corp., disclosed the CEO's severance package in a regulatory filing late Thursday, hours after announcing plans for an $11 billion merger with US Airways Group Inc. The companies hope to win regulatory approval and complete the deal by the end of September.
US Airways CEO Doug Parker will be CEO of the new company, which will be called American Airlines Group Inc. Horton will serve as chairman for about a year before stepping down.
Horton, 51, joined American in 1985, jumped to AT&T for four years in the 2000s, then returned to the airline and became CEO the day before it filed for bankruptcy protection in November 2011.
AMR said in the filing that its board - of which Horton is chairman - approved the severance package as "reasonable and appropriate" because of his long service at the company, the success of the restructuring "and the value created for the company's financial stakeholders."
Horton clashed with AMR's unions during the bankruptcy process when he moved to eliminate thousands of jobs, cut pay, freeze pensions and make other changes designed to save about $1 billion in annual labor costs.
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