NEW YORK (AP) — FedEx said Tuesday that it will be
offering some employees up to two years' pay to leave the company
starting next year.
The voluntary program is part of an effort by
the world's second-biggest package delivery company to cut annual costs
by $1.7 billion within three years.
The restructuring is a
response to a shift by customers away from premium package-delivery
services and toward slower, less expensive modes as the global economy
struggles to grow.
FedEx has a hub at Tri-State Airport near Huntington.
Employees who volunteer for the program will
receive four weeks of pay for every year of service, capped at two full
years of base pay. FedEx has said previously that the buyouts should
reduce "fixed head count by several thousand people."
Those
eligible will be notified in February, and have until April to apply.
They'll find out in May if they are accepted. The first wave of
employees will leave on May 31, the last day of FedEx's fiscal year. The
next wave will leave six months later and the final tranche will depart
on May 31, 2014.
Founder and CEO Fred Smith said in August that
most of the cuts will come in the company's Express and Services units,
which have been hurt the most by the global economic conditions. A
majority of those employees are in the U.S.
The Express unit is
where FedEx got its start in 1971, and it is still the company's biggest
segment by far. The division moves 3.5 million packages on an average
day, mostly by air. It's been hit hard as customers shift to slower
delivery methods such as ground delivery and ocean shipping to conserve
cash. Also, as technology products get lighter, FedEx charges less to
ship them. Apple Inc.'s iPhone 5, for example, is 17 percent lighter
than the first generation model.
Express has more than 146,000 employees worldwide — roughly two-thirds of those are in the U.S.
FedEx
Services is FedEx's behind-the-scenes logistics division, but it also
includes FedEx Office, formerly Kinko's. It is one of FedEx's smallest
units, with 13,000 employees, all based in the U.S.
FedEx, which is based in Memphis, Tenn., also plans to shed aircraft and underused assets to cut costs.
FedEx's
larger rival United Parcel Service Inc., which is based Atlanta, has
also said it's reducing costs to make up for slow growth in the global
economy.
Shares of FedEx rose 65 cents to $88.78 in afternoon trading Tuesday. UPS shares rose 84 cents to $73.11.