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As for the AK comparison....... its all about company profitability in order to keep your contract moving in the right direction and not a concessionary contract. Heres a blurb about Alaska.... tell me what card you'd play? nuff said......................
Alaska Air Group Reports 2006 Full Year And Fourth Quarter Results
1/25/2007 5:00 a.m.
SEATTLE — Alaska Air Group, Inc. (NYSE:ALK) today reported a full year net loss of $52.6 million, or $1.39 per share, compared to a net loss of $5.9 million, or $0.01 per diluted share, in 2005.
There was never any "AK comparison". I was simply making a valid point with regards to making career decisions based on CURRENT CONTRACT WAGES.
Please re-read previous if you don't get it.
And BTW I'm not really sure what your post meant to imply. You gotta read deeper than the 1st line of an acticle to get the big picture. We just had our most profitable year EVER. And the airline's been around for 75 years. Been profitable for something like 30 of the last 35. Our pay cuts were handed to us by an arbitrator, not because we needed to take cuts to save the company. Our company is a loooong way from anywhere near trouble.
I disagree. I think it's very relevant. The point I was trying to make is that choosing a major based highly on money is not the wisest move. Three years ago based on money Alaska would have been a better option than UPS. Do you smell what I'm stepping in?
I agree with most of what you've said except the part about Alaska bleeding red. Aside from one-time charges we've been profitable for a while. Again, the 1st line of the article doesn't always tell the story. Just so you know.I think you miss my point. 3 Years ago UPS was still a HIGHLY profitable company and pax carriers, including Alaska, were bleeding red. I am not suggesting UPS contract will always be higher than that of PAX airlines, rather I am suggesting the pilot groups of Cargo carriers have a much easier time extracting contractural enhancements from highly profitable companies rather than from the pax side of the market. Its all about supply and demand. There is way too much supply of pax carriers. On the cargo side there are few with the clout and the critical mass of UPS/ FEDEx. It would take 2 decades, by my estimation, for any company to attempt to get as big at those two companies. It is their sheer size that allows them to maintain such an extensive global shipping network, which invaribly leads to their massive profit centers. Pax carriers are too busy running price wars to ever get consistantly profitable on the scale of UPS/ FEDEx
I would cry if I had to go back to flying PAX. Just listening to that bitc*y FA on DAL yesterday who was making every PA announcement in the most condescending tone, as if she were speaking to a roomful of six year olds, was enough to thank my lucky stars that I get to fly freight for a living (I had to talk myself into not making a comment to her or the CA. With customer service like that, it's no wonder DAL is going broke).
And by the way, does it bother anyone else when the CA of a 757 who has been doing this for 30+ years gets on the PA and says things like "We'll be taking off on runway 32" or "the weather in XYZ is 400 Broken" or "ATC has just issued us an EDCT?"
I always used to make my PA announcements from the perspective that I was talking to my mother (whose VCR would still be flashing 1200am if she still had a VCR). Go ask 10 people on the street what "broken" clouds are. Ask them what "Runway 32" means to them (why didn't we use on of the other 31 runways?EDCT? Is that Estimated Daylight Central Time?
Ahhhhh....boxes. So much better.
By the way, I'm sure Continental will never furlough again
RO
you are all idiots