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New Concerns About JetBlue - Article

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JetBlue was the pioneer for the unlimited jumpseats for pilots and flight attendants... alpa did $hit for that. So the next time you get a seat on ual, dal, aal when the cockpit is full then thank your friendly B6 pilot.

Tail

You mean the first to offer unlimited?

You are full of sh!T.

It takes a real woman to accept a ride and then later flip your finger at ALPA.

Yep flights are never ever full these days - never, ever - just mostly all the time.

Sure....

Do you accept the jumpseat using CASS?
 
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Splert... go back to grammar school and learn what a fragmented sentence looks like and how to correct it. Then come back here and write legible posts that we can all follow and understand.

I wish we could all pull in the same direction. While we are fighting each other outside and within our mec's and non-union groups we'll never get anything done. I don't like alpa's track record and disagree w/ paying someone 1.95% to do a very poor job of representing me. Until B6 does something to show me otherwise I will not vote for alpa here. But most of my anti alpa posts are in response to others attacking me or b6 about perceptions or blind admissions of how great alpa is. Alpa used to be great. But recently alpa has shown me nothing.

Now, I don't claim to be an english teacher, but wasn't this post a little easier to follow and comprehend than your posts?

Tail
 
JetBlue was the pioneer for the unlimited jumpseats for pilots and flight attendants... alpa did $hit for that. So the next time you get a seat on ual, dal, aal when the cockpit is full then thank your friendly B6 pilot.

Tail


Complete and utter BS. We had them back in 97 so stuff it.
 
ALPA didn't lose the legacy pilots pension, pay and work rules. ALPA and other organizations are powerless against - I'll say it slowly - U N I T E D...S T A T E S...F E D E R A L...B K...C O U R T S. Nothing is more powerful - nothing.

Do you use CASS to get home or to work?

I'm guessing by your silence the answers is - every single chance you get. I'm sure you tell everyone you have a chance to tell that ALPA sucks when you are riding to work or home.

The MEC never get anything done? Did you get into this profession so you could wear your uniform to the local donut shop and look important or did you get into this profession because of the low pay and no benefits? Most of us got into this profession because it was a profession and had good pay and benefits - that management did not hand out freely - they were hard fought.

They are even harder fought when you are willing to sacrifice other jetBlue pilots so that you will benefit - that is the most troubling aspect of the blue juicers.
 
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Jetblue is part of the problem and I openly concede this fact. What sticks in my craw is egomaniac, on their high horse legacy guys like UAL who will/are quick to fault one airline or one group when the problem is much more systemic and larger.

SHOW ME ANYWHERE IN ANY OF MY POSTS WHERE I SAID JETBLUE IS THE ONLY PROBLEM. ANYWHERE. REREAD MY POST WHERE I RESPONDED TO YOU THE FIRST TIME. And you called me a moron? If you're going to debate me 1) don't resort to name calling because that is generally the refuge of those who can't respond to factual information and 2) read the sentences in all caps and show me where I said Jetblue was the entire problem. JetBlue, the LCC's, and other factors have all lead to the demise of legacy pay and work rules. In my opinion, the rapid spread of the LCC's in the late 90's and early 00's most greatly contributed to the demise of pension, workrules, and pay. Period. Read slowly this time.


From a straight pay model they help you out. Now please refresh my memory, was any LCC repsonsible for you losing your pension? Although I am extremely sorry that you lost your pension, which ultimately affects all of us, I know the LCC's were not at fault.

Yes, they were largely at fault. LCC's were using their low compensation packages (pay, work rules, lack of pension/retirement) to undercut legacy pricing power. When we all went into bankruptcy, we had to emulate our competition in order to be competitive. We had to do our best to match their costs, including work rules, wages, and ultimately our pension. Any airline competing against a JetBlue, for example, with the additional costs of a pension are at a competitive disadvantage.


Since 9-11 your inept union leadership and management have been reaching to place the blame on anyone but yourselves.

OK, Alice. I'll bite. Explain to me the SPECIFIC things that the union leadership at UAL did wrong that otherwise would have saved my pay, work rules, and pensions. I already explained why I think there was nothing ALPA could do about our demise. You explain to me what ALPA should have done. I'm anxiously awaiting to such phrases as "we should have stood together" or "we should have taken one for the team." Feel free to quote any airline financial statements to assert your points as I am intimately familiar (unfortunately) with the past and current financial problems UAL had/has. You'll find UAL's under "investor relations" at ual.com.

Back to my sytemc comment. In our culture today we are taught to blame everyone else but ourselves, what happened to some accountability. Your out of control structure was your demise, not an LCC.

What out of control structure was that? Please be specific. Was it the structure that supported a pilot being pad, God forbid, $200 bucks an hour to fly a narrowbody aircraft with a pension and good QOL? Please, I'm all ears. Talk about that structure for us.

What happened to every legacy carrier was already going to happen, 9-11 or not.

I absoultely agree. 9-11 hastened the legacy carrier's demise. And in fact, it was starting just before that. I remember Carty telling the financial markets that he had never seen such a drop off in premium traffic so rapidly, describing the period just before 9-11. But there's a reason it was already going to happen. The LCC's had reached critical mass and the legacies were going to have to come down to the low bar set by them, 9-11 withstanding.

Could an LCC have expidited things, maybe and thats a reaching maybe, but you made your bed and now you don't want to lie in it.
Again, watch who you blame, educate your self and look in the mirror. Jetblue is a problem and we all know that but our structure had nothing to do with your meltdown.

I know exactly where the blame lies, and I am highly educated on the subject having experienced it first hand. That's why I can debate someone without resorting to name calling. I don't blame ALPA for market forces beyond its control. Hell, I won't even blame ALPA when cabotage comes to the U.S. despite its objections (market forces will prevail in my opinion in the up and coming years) . What hypothetical bed did I make, anyway?
 
Splert

Alpo had nothing to do with CASS.

Cass was designed and proposed by UPS, it is a database created and maintained by each individual airline. It also requires each airline to develop their own software to interface with the central server and a contract and monthly fee are required by them as well.

P.S.

You are and IDIOT.
 
The ATA, not the airline, and ALPA work together to get it implemented system wide, including UPS. UPS was just the first airline? the TSA approved.

The PVC was just about to start working on it - sure.
 
splert0 ualdriver 0 Tail 3
This is so much better than CNN!;) Just like asking a democrat for the solution to world problems (PC version)
 
Keep your head in the sand and that old airline finance 101 book by the crapper... if you don't adapt you become yesterday's news and success.

I think that was his point. In order to compete with airlines like JBLU, which paid 50% of industry scale with no defined benefit and few work rules, the legacy carriers were forced to "adapt or become yesterdays news," hence the draconian cuts at the laegacy carriers.
 
just why you do think the dollar has plumeted over the last few years against all but fixed currencies?

The government spends more than it takes in. Under the Bush Administration and republican congress federal spending and debt has skyrocketted. Of course a quagmire like Iraq doesn't help either.
 
FDJ2:

Care to explain how, before JB was around, that SWA paid less than the legacy carriers, yet you were able to negotiate 40% pay raises like the UAL guys? How is that?

I don't remember DAL management coming to you in the late 90's and whining about SWA's lower costs!

Please try again.

A350
 
FDJ2:

Care to explain how, before JB was around, that SWA paid less than the legacy carriers, yet you were able to negotiate 40% pay raises like the UAL guys? How is that?

I don't remember DAL management coming to you in the late 90's and whining about SWA's lower costs!
Management always came to us whining about SWA. The low pay and no pension plan of SWA was the envy of managements throughout the industry,but yields were still up and the airlines were still profitable. However in the last 7 years not only did we have to deal with the cyclical nature of the industry, and lowering yields, but also the hyper growth of LCC. The growth of LCC into our markets had not reached critical mass in 2000. How many airframes did SWA fly in 2000, how many did AAI fly in 2000, how many did Jblu fly in 2000? How many do they fly now?Take a look at the growth rates of LCCs in the last 7 years then get back to me on that.

By no means are LCCs soley responsible, but to the extent that LCCs were able to undercut the legacy airlines by utilizing their lower cost structure, which included pay rates as low as 50% below the competition, no pension, and substandard work rules, the hyper growth of LCCs was certainly a major contributing factor.
 
FDJ2:

I am sorry, I disagree with your arguement....

How many airplanes has AAI, JB, and SWA put in the air since 2000? JB has 125 jets, AAI probably 100, and SWA perhaps 120. How many jets have the legacy carriers parked since 9/11? USAir parked 100 in a day, so figure at least 400-500. You outsourced to the lowest bidder the rest.

Legacy management likes to demonize the LCC as the reason for coming to you and asking for your pension and the rest of the concessions. That way they can smile and shake you hand while they put their other hand in your wallet.

A350
 
737 Pylt wrote:



Who cares where the 14% comes from! My point is that a lot of guys talk about how great alpa is and what they do for the cause yet facts and statistics show otherwise... 14% participation in 2006 for Alpa Pac... down 16% from 1983 levels when alpa pac was formed. Yet you probably didn't have those facts b/c your head is burried in the sand next to ualdriver's.
Easy big fella.....You're getting too emotional! I really don't care to be quite honest with you. However, since you started this discussion, how's JB's unions doing negotiating pay raises? Oh yeah, no union. Take what we offer, or take a hike sport!
How about when one of you guys busts an altitude or bends some metal....Talk with your union rep and see if he can help you out! Better yet, maybe management will help you out....After all, they are looking out for your best interest. Look, I'm no fan of ALPA, but its a necessary evil!

As far as bk is concerned... go and call the people who lost their jobs, businesses and retirements over the bk courts "allowing" dal to cut BILLIONS in debt... it's money, bills and commitments that was reneged on by DAL to screw others, including yourself.
Sounds like a beef with government laws, what does this have to do with ALPA?

You have to go no further than to look at your reflection in your soup spoon. So no, I don't have specific bills to show you jacka$$...
Sounds like the real jackass is the one you look at in the mirror every morning dumbass!
yet if you have to ask again what bills then you just let us all know how ignorant you really are....
Naah, just proving how unbelievably stupid you are! If you're going to challenge someone, back it up with facts....Either that, or just STFU dumbass!

ps-the major alpa carriers represent much more than 14% of the total alpa pilot population... don't ya think there guy? Why don't you guys worry about fixing alpa and getting your own members to pull in the same direction instead of wasting your breath on pointing your fingers and blaming jetblue for your worries.... you alpa guys are like the us prior to ww2.... very xenophobic. Blame what you don't understand by pointing fingers and accusing others for your downfall is a natural trait for the uninformed.
This whole statement is exactly all it took to prove that you are clueless in this industry! If I were you, I'd make sure I checked the ice in the blue juice this week:

"The carrier also burned through $65 million in cash and added more than $500 million in new debt. JetBlue has more than $2.9 billion in debt -- more than three times the equity stockholders have in the business."

So how long before you visit BK Hook?? I'm sure your management team will be looking after you guys!

737
 
My skirt is always hiked up enough so my hairy balls are showing.... just the way you like it.

I am scared of competition... if you aren't then you are sticking your head in the sand. Sure B6 gets special deals. Are you that ignorant to think your airline, whoever that is doesn't get special deals?????? NWA doesn't get special deals in MEM, Detroit or Mini.... DAL doesn't get special deals in Atlanta, Salt Lake or CVG?????? UAL doesn't get special deals in Denver, ORD or IAD?????? AAL doesn't get special deals in DFW?????? Hey master of the obvious.... wake up. All airlines get special deals. And if your airline is not getting special deals somewhere then your mangement sucks! It's part of bargaining good business deals. Whatever your mangagement can swing is call an advantage over competition. Should we go back to socialism in a non capatilistic society and make it even for all??? Then trade in your nice house, give half your pay to a poor person and move into a double wide jacka$$.

I sure hope to think we have a special deal w/ airbus.... since we are the largest operator of A320's in the entire world. I hope we have a special deal w/ embraer since we are the worldwide launch customer for the E190 and have to deal w/ all of the growing and teething issues.

I know we have a special deal w/ jfk... we are the largest operator here and revitalized a dieing airport. I hope we have a great deal in BOS... we took over gates that DAL abandoned and made them very lucrative...

Get my point? You are so ignorant to get mad at our "special deals" and think your company doesn't do or would jump at the same issues.... maybe your team sucks and you need a change. I don't care. I back my management and believe and trust in them and don't have to pay a 1.95% premium to have bad labor relations.... hopefully I never will again. It didn't work at NWA for me and god help me if I ever have to go back to Detroilet ever again.... (having been born and raised in MI i can say that........ don't try to Imus me on that comment).....


Tail

Tail,

I never said I was mad at anything.....you are the one on the ropes, calling me names, acting like a 5 year old. I was just clarifying and making sure that I was hearing you right.

You complained about how my airline went into bankruptcy, but yet you never acknowledged the deals you were getting.

I love the way you try to bring legitimacy to you and your airline by being the "largest" or "THE launch customer".....I'm sure your few friends and family are sick of you bragging about your 24 channels of TV, so this is your new look-at-me gimmick.
Congrats on being the largest operator of A320's, and the launch customer of the turd you people call the 190.......something to be proud of......sorta like being the best football team in Alaska.....who give a rats a$s.
 
FDJ2:

I am sorry, I disagree with your arguement....

How many airplanes has AAI, JB, and SWA put in the air since 2000? JB has 125 jets, AAI probably 100, and SWA perhaps 120.

That's quite a few aircraft put into circulation at reduced pay rates and benefits. With the razor thin margins this industry works on that has a large effect on the industry and can only lead to a lowering of the bar.
 
"The carrier also burned through $65 million in cash and added more than $500 million in new debt. JetBlue has more than $2.9 billion in debt -- more than three times the equity stockholders have in the business."
737

$2.9Billion in debt and negative cash flow of $65m. Ouch!

How many A320s will JBLU sell this year?
 
Tail,

.....I'm sure your few friends and family are sick of you bragging about your 24 channels of TV, so this is your new look-at-me gimmick.

It's 36 channels dude! get your facts straight!:D
 
ALPA didn't lose the legacy pilots pension, pay and work rules. ALPA and other organizations are powerless against - I'll say it slowly - U N I T E D...S T A T E S...F E D E R A L...B K...C O U R T S. Nothing is more powerful - nothing.

Do you use CASS to get home or to work?

I'm guessing by your silence the answers is - every single chance you get. I'm sure you tell everyone you have a chance to tell that ALPA sucks when you are riding to work or home.

The MEC never get anything done? Did you get into this profession so you could wear your uniform to the local donut shop and look important or did you get into this profession because of the low pay and no benefits? Most of us got into this profession because it was a profession and had good pay and benefits - that management did not hand out freely - they were hard fought.

They are even harder fought when you are willing to sacrifice other jetBlue pilots so that you will benefit - that is the most troubling aspect of the blue juicers.
YOU ARE WRONG! No bankruptcy judge can make you go to work! If the pilots decided to unify and show solidarity, you'd see real power! United we stand divided we fall! We have fallen pretty far because of a lack of unity. Take a lesson from the teachers union in Detroit who were ordered back to work when they sought self help. They continued with their self help and paid their fine! Living in fear of protecting what you've worked so hard for? Why do airline personel live this way? I say again, if the termination of pensions wasn't enough to unite the pilots in this country and stand up for what is right, then we are in trouble! Management knows there are suckers out there that live in fear and wont take a stand. ALPA, NPA, SWAPA, APA. One voice is great power!
 
[YOU ARE WRONG! No bankruptcy judge can make you go to work!

True. But he can fine you into oblivion. Or you can have a mass resignation of pilots to get around the order to work. Neither are realistic solutions.


If the pilots decided to unify and show solidarity, you'd see real power! United we stand divided we fall! We have fallen pretty far because of a lack of unity.

That's true, but there is no unity across the industry. And even if we were able to cobble something together, there would always be another JetBlue, Allegiant, Skybus, Virgin, etc., to come in and undercut you.


Take a lesson from the teachers union in Detroit who were ordered back to work when they sought self help. They continued with their self help and paid their fine!

Unfortunately there's a difference between pilots and teachers. With respect to the teachers, there isn't a ready, willing, and able supply of people willing to work for less than half the going rate of a teacher's salary without a pension. If there was, I imagine that strike would have turned out differently. With pilots, there are plenty of guys willing to work for far less than the going rate, back then and now.


Living in fear of protecting what you've worked so hard for? Why do airline personel live this way? I say again, if the termination of pensions wasn't enough to unite the pilots in this country and stand up for what is right, then we are in trouble! Management knows there are suckers out there that live in fear and wont take a stand. ALPA, NPA, SWAPA, APA. One voice is great power!

That's all well and good, but unfortunately not realistic in the U.S. airline industry. Look no further that all the people on this forum who think ALPA lost their pensions or their jobs, as if it was part of some grand plan to screw over their members. And guys on this forum are probably slightly more educated than the line guy that doesn't even get bad information from an aviation forum.

And I wouldn't say most guys live in fear of anything. In my opinion, the problem with today's union guy is this: we have to be good unionists, and we have to be realistic businessmen. Let me explain using my airline's bankruptcy as an example.

Let's say the UAL pilot group going through bankruptcy was 100% absolutely unified. So unified that it scared the crap out of everyone- management, bankers, and the other employee groups. We were so unified that every other employee group on the property had to take a cut, but when it came for us to give up our share, we said not only no, but he11 no. Everyone was so intimidated by our strength and unity that everyone took cuts except us. The UAL pilot group, in reality, gave 1.1B/year in concessions (pay, work rules, pensions) to the company. But because we were 100% absolutely unified in this example, we didn't give up one dime. No furloughs. Nothing.

Good, right? That's what a theoretical perfect union is all about, right? Well, here's where we have to be good businessmen. Now let's say that despite our unwillingness to take cuts that the banks actually gave us exit financing so we could exit bankruptcy. It wouldn't have happened in real life, but let's say in this hypothetical that pilot unity scared the crap out of the banks and they gave us exit financing anyway and UAL exits bankruptcy.

So here's UAL exiting bankruptcy in Feb of '06 with 1.1B dollars of extra pilot costs per year because the pilots would give up nothing. Take a look at the 8K's filed since we have exited bankruptcy. We're barely profitable. For the most part, that's true for just about all the legacies. Now add 1.1B in extra costs to our bottom line- or anyone's bottom line. We'd be in a deep hole with about 2-3 years to live maximum while we burn through cash. Sure, we're making industry leading wages with a pension and good work rules (good pilot's union, right?). But it's totally unsustainable. The LCC's would smell blood in the water and we'd be dead. Any legacy would be. 10's of thousands of people would be out of a job. Did ALPA do a good job being a "strong 100% unified union" in this example?

So UAL ALPA is totally screwed. So is US Air ALPA. So is DAL ALPA. Or whoever ALPA. They can agree to either be 100% unified and take no cuts whatsoever and watch their airlines slowly die as LCC's totally undercut them and put ALL of its ALPA members out of a job, or they can furlough, take cuts, lose pensions, and adapt to the new LCC reality of crappy pay, crappy work rules that require less pilots on the property, and no pensions.

That's why it's pretty annoying to me when guys say they hate ALPA for not "saving their jobs" or "saving the pensions" or "not standing together" or "insert issue here." As if ALPA (or any union for that matter) could somehow keep ANYONE's pay or work rules or pension or job in the new LCC environment that, in my opinion, reached a critical mass in the late 90's. So you guys can bash ALPA, call it "alpo" or whatever, but I don't see how these legacy jobs/pay/workrules/pensions could have been saved nor how it is ALPA's fault that they weren't. Rant over, I guess.
 
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YOU ARE WRONG! No bankruptcy judge can make you go to work! If the pilots decided to unify and show solidarity, you'd see real power! United we stand divided we fall!

Do that and have a Federal BK judges decide what is a competitive contract. Make no mistake they would have and you would be much worse off - you would probably have B6 work rules and retirement - which is very close to none.

The teachers union are not faced with a BK judge veto power - ALPA was - big difference.
 
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Ualdriver...

if we were to sit down and drink a few beers I bet after a few names and trash talk we'd be pretty close on our views. I never said I hate alpa or blame alpa for losing my job but I have said I do blame alpa for not holding onto any part of the contract I worked under at NWA... also on the allowance of alpa to represent the very companies that scope protection was invented for... bottom line is that I haven't been impressed by alpa. I have more respect for APA, SWAPA and Frontier Pilots than I do for Alpa. Alpa is too big and represents too many different types of pilots.... i know that it's the mec that sets the tone and really counts but the track record speaks otherwise recently for the passenger carriers whether you're a regional or legacy. Nothing we agreed to was really held onto and at least at NWA it's quite a shell of it's former self. Due to this I will have to stay at B6 and give up my # at NWA.... it was never my grand plan but things change in life.

Tail

Tail
 
Ualdriver...

if we were to sit down and drink a few beers I bet after a few names and trash talk we'd be pretty close on our views. I never said I hate alpa or blame alpa for losing my job but I have said I do blame alpa for not holding onto any part of the contract I worked under at NWA... also on the allowance of alpa to represent the very companies that scope protection was invented for... bottom line is that I haven't been impressed by alpa. I have more respect for APA, SWAPA and Frontier Pilots than I do for Alpa. Alpa is too big and represents too many different types of pilots.... i know that it's the mec that sets the tone and really counts but the track record speaks otherwise recently for the passenger carriers whether you're a regional or legacy. Nothing we agreed to was really held onto and at least at NWA it's quite a shell of it's former self. Due to this I will have to stay at B6 and give up my # at NWA.... it was never my grand plan but things change in life.

Tail

Tail

What you forget to tell everyone here on this post is that being a NWA pilot on furlough, you have received a pretty big amount of money thanks to ALPA. Due to NWA exiting BK, there has been 3 bankruptcy claim sales. I worked there for 1 year, was furloughed after 9/11, yet received a $76,000 settlement for our retirement thanks to ALPA. That's more than I made there the entire year at NWA. So Tail, how much money did you get? Thank ALPA.

The improved retirement plan for JetBlue was a companywide initiative. You as a pilot got the same increase in 401K matching and the same 5% profit sharing as the guy working the ramp. Unless JetBlue pilots organize, I'm afraid we as a pilot group will not get any better retirement plan. If you are satisfied to receive the exact benefits as the ramper and gate agent, then continue to bash both unions and ALPA. I wasn't a fan of unions, but many here at JB are coming around to the idea. It may not be ALPA, but rather JAPA!

Listen, I'm an A320 Capt here at JB. I got no raise vs the pay increases the A320 FO, E190 CA and FOs received. As an A320 Capt, you will see a raise at your 6 and 12 year longevity. And HELLO, none of us will see the guaranteed 5% profit sharing until NEXT year. So, for me, I got a 2% 401K match increase. Furthermore, management is taking away our stock purchase plan which gave us a 15% discount over a 6 month buy period. Now that's going to shrink to 5% discount with no 2 year look back. No thanks, I'll just take my money and put it into a money market account!
 
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It may not be ALPA, but rather JAPA!


it cannot be jbapa, it will be way too costly and innefective. it will cost about 3-4% plus 1-3 hours of pay a month for aditional assesment $$$$. alpa will be the way to go, alpa is not some obscure entity, it is us, we will get good leadership in our mec and lec and negotiate a good contract for both JB and its pilots.
 
Ualdriver...

if we were to sit down and drink a few beers I bet after a few names and trash talk we'd be pretty close on our views. I never said I hate alpa or blame alpa for losing my job but I have said I do blame alpa for not holding onto any part of the contract I worked under at NWA... also on the allowance of alpa to represent the very companies that scope protection was invented for... bottom line is that I haven't been impressed by alpa. I have more respect for APA, SWAPA and Frontier Pilots than I do for Alpa. Alpa is too big and represents too many different types of pilots.... i know that it's the mec that sets the tone and really counts but the track record speaks otherwise recently for the passenger carriers whether you're a regional or legacy. Nothing we agreed to was really held onto and at least at NWA it's quite a shell of it's former self. Due to this I will have to stay at B6 and give up my # at NWA.... it was never my grand plan but things change in life.

Tail

Tail

I like beer.

I think unions like ALPA, APA, SWAPA, etc., are ultimately semi-powerless against market forces, although their members think that unity somehow makes them inpervious to the will of capitalism. And that means that if an airline (or a car manufacturer or a textile mill) is forced to compete with other entities that lower the bar of pay (SkyBus, Virgin, Allegiant anyone?), work rules, benefits, the union might be able to stop the slide at first, but in the end its members will be screwed. Not by the union, but by the market forces these businesses operate in. Unfortunately, I think a lot of guys misdirect their anger at ALPA instead of where it should be placed.

I agree with Spectre on the claim sales we received as well. Those two deals here at UAL more than covered any amount of dues I will ever pay ALPA over my entire career. Had it not been for ALPA, I might have received the stock, but I doubt I would have received the bond money.
 
What you forget to tell everyone here on this post is that being a NWA pilot on furlough, you have received a pretty big amount of money thanks to ALPA. Due to NWA exiting BK, there has been 3 bankruptcy claim sales. I worked there for 1 year, was furloughed after 9/11, yet received a $76,000 settlement for our retirement thanks to ALPA. That's more than I made there the entire year at NWA. So Tail, how much money did you get? Thank ALPA.

The improved retirement plan for JetBlue was a companywide initiative. You as a pilot got the same increase in 401K matching and the same 5% profit sharing as the guy working the ramp. Unless JetBlue pilots organize, I'm afraid we as a pilot group will not get any better retirement plan. If you are satisfied to receive the exact benefits as the ramper and gate agent, then continue to bash both unions and ALPA. I wasn't a fan of unions, but many here at JB are coming around to the idea. It may not be ALPA, but rather JAPA!

Listen, I'm an A320 Capt here at JB. I got no raise vs the pay increases the A320 FO, E190 CA and FOs received. As an A320 Capt, you will see a raise at your 6 and 12 year longevity. And HELLO, none of us will see the guaranteed 5% profit sharing until NEXT year. So, for me, I got a 2% 401K match increase. Furthermore, management is taking away our stock purchase plan which gave us a 15% discount over a 6 month buy period. Now that's going to shrink to 5% discount with no 2 year look back. No thanks, I'll just take my money and put it into a money market account!

One major flaw in your 'pilots should have a different retirement plan' argument is that I guarantee that as a 320 Capt you make more than the ramper pushing back the airplane or shleping bags. Your 5% is alot more than his 5%.
 
[YOU ARE WRONG! No bankruptcy judge can make you go to work!

True. But he can fine you into oblivion. Or you can have a mass resignation of pilots to get around the order to work. Neither are realistic solutions.


If the pilots decided to unify and show solidarity, you'd see real power! United we stand divided we fall! We have fallen pretty far because of a lack of unity.

That's true, but there is no unity across the industry. And even if we were able to cobble something together, there would always be another JetBlue, Allegiant, Skybus, Virgin, etc., to come in and undercut you.


Take a lesson from the teachers union in Detroit who were ordered back to work when they sought self help. They continued with their self help and paid their fine!

Unfortunately there's a difference between pilots and teachers. With respect to the teachers, there isn't a ready, willing, and able supply of people willing to work for less than half the going rate of a teacher's salary without a pension. If there was, I imagine that strike would have turned out differently. With pilots, there are plenty of guys willing to work for far less than the going rate, back then and now.


Living in fear of protecting what you've worked so hard for? Why do airline personel live this way? I say again, if the termination of pensions wasn't enough to unite the pilots in this country and stand up for what is right, then we are in trouble! Management knows there are suckers out there that live in fear and wont take a stand. ALPA, NPA, SWAPA, APA. One voice is great power!

That's all well and good, but unfortunately not realistic in the U.S. airline industry. Look no further that all the people on this forum who think ALPA lost their pensions or their jobs, as if it was part of some grand plan to screw over their members. And guys on this forum are probably slightly more educated than the line guy that doesn't even get bad information from an aviation forum.

And I wouldn't say most guys live in fear of anything. In my opinion, the problem with today's union guy is this: we have to be good unionists, and we have to be realistic businessmen. Let me explain using my airline's bankruptcy as an example.

Let's say the UAL pilot group going through bankruptcy was 100% absolutely unified. So unified that it scared the crap out of everyone- management, bankers, and the other employee groups. We were so unified that every other employee group on the property had to take a cut, but when it came for us to give up our share, we said not only no, but he11 no. Everyone was so intimidated by our strength and unity that everyone took cuts except us. The UAL pilot group, in reality, gave 1.1B/year in concessions (pay, work rules, pensions) to the company. But because we were 100% absolutely unified in this example, we didn't give up one dime. No furloughs. Nothing.

Good, right? That's what a theoretical perfect union is all about, right? Well, here's where we have to be good businessmen. Now let's say that despite our unwillingness to take cuts that the banks actually gave us exit financing so we could exit bankruptcy. It wouldn't have happened in real life, but let's say in this hypothetical that pilot unity scared the crap out of the banks and they gave us exit financing anyway and UAL exits bankruptcy.

So here's UAL exiting bankruptcy in Feb of '06 with 1.1B dollars of extra pilot costs per year because the pilots would give up nothing. Take a look at the 8K's filed since we have exited bankruptcy. We're barely profitable. For the most part, that's true for just about all the legacies. Now add 1.1B in extra costs to our bottom line- or anyone's bottom line. We'd be in a deep hole with about 2-3 years to live maximum while we burn through cash. Sure, we're making industry leading wages with a pension and good work rules (good pilot's union, right?). But it's totally unsustainable. The LCC's would smell blood in the water and we'd be dead. Any legacy would be. 10's of thousands of people would be out of a job. Did ALPA do a good job being a "strong 100% unified union" in this example?

So UAL ALPA is totally screwed. So is US Air ALPA. So is DAL ALPA. Or whoever ALPA. They can agree to either be 100% unified and take no cuts whatsoever and watch their airlines slowly die as LCC's totally undercut them and put ALL of its ALPA members out of a job, or they can furlough, take cuts, lose pensions, and adapt to the new LCC reality of crappy pay, crappy work rules that require less pilots on the property, and no pensions.

That's why it's pretty annoying to me when guys say they hate ALPA for not "saving their jobs" or "saving the pensions" or "not standing together" or "insert issue here." As if ALPA (or any union for that matter) could somehow keep ANYONE's pay or work rules or pension or job in the new LCC environment that, in my opinion, reached a critical mass in the late 90's. So you guys can bash ALPA, call it "alpo" or whatever, but I don't see how these legacy jobs/pay/workrules/pensions could have been saved nor how it is ALPA's fault that they weren't. Rant over, I guess.
First of all, I have worked for a legacy and a low cost carrier! Your argument is exactly why we are in the situation today! Those are excuses based on fear! Don't blame jetblue, Airtran, and Southwest for the problems of Delta, US Airways, United, and Northwest. Lack of vision and piss poor management is to blame. Continental and American airlines made it through the last 6 years without having to file for Ch. 11. Why, because their management and their unions worked together to find a business model that worked for them. They didn't sit around and wait for US Airways to go out of business. They solved their business problems and have been successful without using the courts. Did their employees take hits, yes. Did they lose their pensions, no! Many companies saw US Airways as going out of business in 2004 and said all their problems would go away when US Air did. To base your business plan solely on someone elses misfortunes is not very smart. Thus the courts those companies visited. (including ATA) This fear mentality that we have adopted in this industry is just what management wants from you. Keep thinking it is unrealistic for you to take a stand for your career and we will all someday be contract pilots flying for the lowest bidder! Ten years ago when those shinny little jets were being placed at Comair, did the pilots stand up to management and say, we will fly them at fair wages.....HELL NO! We were to dang arrogant to have vision to see what those jets would do to this industry. Especially the way they are being contracted out. Routes that were once flown by DC-9, 737-200 and 737-300 aircraft and Fokker 100s are now being flown by CRJ700s, EMB-170s, and CRJ900s! Ask yourself what has changed? We let it happen by giving up scope and not keeping jet airplanes where they belong....AT MAINLINE! That is where your wages have gone and the jobs that proudly followed! Everytime you see a EMB-170 or a CRJ-700 or a CRJ900 in United, Delta, and US Airways colors, THAT IS YOUR PROBLEM.....not jetblue, airtran, and southwest! That is the TRUTH and TRUE REALITY! (remember your MEC gave that up)
 
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