Rez O. Lewshun
Save the Profession
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2004
- Posts
- 13,422
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You forgot money grubbing, dues raping, National officer pocket lining.
ualdriver:
ALPA union pilots have spent the past few years, tripping all over themselves, undercutting each other.
A350
So, tell me again how this will keep pilots from undercutting each other?
Count me in.Good post UAL.... if the JBPA is accepting donations... I'll send some cabbage..... what about you PCL128?
And much has to do with what ALPA has done for many of it's members these past 6 years post 9/11. ALPA had their opportunity to shine in sticking up for TWA, pay, benefits, retirements, AGE 65, the USAir/AWA merger and have failed miserably. ...
Your opinion, while cogent, ignores the marketplace.
If JB was the onus for $120/hour Bus Captains worldwide,
then why isn't your management wanting $65/hour Bus Captains like Skybus? Why didn't your management demand pay parity with MaxJet on the B767?
The marketplace determines who survives and who doesn't. While employee costs are part of the equation, so are business dynamics.
JB is a mostly leisure carrier. Most legacy carriers are not. Legacy management and ALPA continue to try to make the LCC's/non-union carriers the scapegoat on why they had to desecrate the pay and working conditions of their employees.
Why, in the world of $80/bbl oil are the legacy carriers pretty profitable and JB is less profitable than when it started? Market dynamics.
The legacy carriers went on a binge farming out their flying to lower total cost regionals who were ALPA represented. That made for a glut of unemployed, very qualified pilots. Too many pilots fighting for the precious few jobs causes downward pressure on wages. Right now, we are seeing the opposite (until the 65 thing) and what little upward wage pressure we had is probably gone.
A couple of final points. There is no way a 25 airplane airline has the power to bring the industry to its knees unless that is what the industry managers want to have happen. (9/11 certainly helped this along as well).
The airline is 7 years old. We don't "deserve" the right to get paid SWA wages yet because we still have to survive the infancy stage
However, UAL Driver, your argument about why jetBlue hasn't been as profitable lately doesn't pass the smell test (although most of your other observations are spot-on).
He-he. I can't always be right
My point is that the reason why JetBlue isn't wildly successful now like they were in the early 00's is because we're all little domestic JetBlue's right now. Almost all of our narrowbody rates suck, almost all of our workrules suck, almost all of us don't have defined pension plans, almost all of us cut our operation to the bone, outsource our maintenance to the lowest bidder in whatever second or third world country that can pass as minimally acceptable, etc, etc. All the cost advantages they enjoyed (with their largest cost advantage being labor) are now gone. So now they're stuck, muddling along, just like the rest of us. That's my point.
Again, it wasn't just your 25 airplane operation. It was your 25 airplane operation, and AirTran's Operation, and Frontier's operation, and Western Pacific's Operation and Vanguard's Operation, and Southwest's Operation, and, and, and........The reason why JetBlue I think catches so much crap is because they CONTINUALLY take steps to screw the industry even further (E190 rates, transcon turns, etc.), while other LCC pilot groups seem to "get it" now (witness AirTran, SWA). That's why I'm happy to see you guys get organized. Maybe the JetBlue guys are starting to "get it" too? (except you?)
Man I cringe when I read airline pilots post stuff like this. [regarding someone saying JB doesn't "deserve" SWA pay]
If JB was the onus for $120/hour Bus Captains worldwide, then why isn't your management wanting $65/hour Bus Captains like Skybus? Why didn't your management demand pay parity with MaxJet on the B767?
The marketplace determines who survives and who doesn't. While employee costs are part of the equation, so are business dynamics. JB is a mostly leisure carrier. Most legacy carriers are not. Legacy management and ALPA continue to try to make the LCC's/non-union carriers the scapegoat on why they had to desecrate the pay and working conditions of their employees.
Why, in the world of $80/bbl oil are the legacy carriers pretty profitable and JB is less profitable than when it started? Market dynamics. The legacy carriers went on a binge farming out their flying to lower total cost regionals who were ALPA represented. That made for a glut of unemployed, very qualified pilots. Too many pilots fighting for the precious few jobs causes downward pressure on wages. Right now, we are seeing the opposite (until the 65 thing) and what little upward wage pressure we had is probably gone.
A couple of final points. There is no way a 25 airplane airline has the power to bring the industry to its knees unless that is what the industry managers want to have happen. (9/11 certainly helped this along as well).
The ideal of the last contract +1% in the ALPA negotiating world is a thing for textbooks. It doesn't exist. The closest we came to it was in the late 90's when the dot com boom was in full swing and the fares paid by the average businessman were sky high. With the internet, I doubt we will ever see that again.
Rez: Your post is bunk. There is a large disparity between what different ALPA groups are paid to fly similar equipment.....The Kalitta guys are ALPA and they fly the B747 for $50/hour less than the UAL guys.