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Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2001
- Posts
- 6,137
It was much, MUCH, more than a rumor at ASA. Those airplanes were converted from ASA's FIRM order prior to the asset purchase, we had approval for the operation from the FAA for the operation of those aircraft (which SkyWest did not have at the time) and it just makes more sense for ASA to operate those airplanes under the agreement with DL in ATL.ASA even put out a memo saying that we would be taking delivery of the 900s.
Guess what, SkyWest is flying them.
Until the aircraft is on your ramp and painted in your colors it's just a rumor.
The loss of these airplanes are part of what triggered the transfer of Comair's airplanes to keep ASA in compliance with DL's agreement that 80% of DCI from ATL would be ASA. Comair is down to 15 CRJ700's seaters as a result.
It is an open debate whether ALPA made the right move. Without scope at the DCI level the ASA pilots really don't have any control, or negotiating power. We could get a good contract, but watch our fleet disappear.
If you graph the block hours that have been transferred outside of ALPA at the small jet level the numbers are simply shocking. ALPA's intentional action to undermine small jet members to enable mainline members unlimited negotiating power (regardless of harm to other pilots) has truly destroyed this profession and done the most harm to ALPA members at the small jet carriers. Maybe ALPA's answer is to try to intentionally put the ALPA represented small jet carriers out of business - nobody seems to shed any tears for them and at this point there may be no solution to the alter ego disaster.
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