Rez, I don't know if it can be changed. I agree that we need something, but I think that ALPA needs to re-think its strategy. How can ALPA, which represents two regionals, allow one to be undercut and lose flying to the other? What is ALPA doing to solidify its different regionals to avoid this situation? ALPA has potential, and they have tools. Do they need to strike if they don't get their way? Not necessarily, but they can do a slow down. What I keep hearing is "You gotta play by the rules" Isn't that the impetus which helped form ALPA? The rules didn't favor the pilot?
ALPA has resources at its disposal which it doesn't want to use. It involves taking risks, maybe doing a slow down or having a strike...but until ALPA gets the pilot groups together to act as one, Management will be able to divide and conquer at will.
Where's the help from the majors? They're involved more than they know it because when furloughs are handed out, alot of those guys are taking jobs at Regionals which they couldn't give to $hits about while they were flying for Mainline. Why don't they build something into their contract to the effect of: Any airline performing regional duties for Delta will agree not to fly these aircraft lower than these rates?
Yeah, it's one from left field, but it's thinking out of the box. Has this idea been suggested before?