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Skywest new pay proposal! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

  • Thread starter Thread starter Gandalf
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I am curious if the anti-union types at SkyWest are planning on moving on from their regional, or are planning on becoming career CRJ pilots.
 
vtech,

My point is essentially that I (and all ALPA pilots) commit a portion of our earnings to the defense and furtherance of the profession as a whole.

How do you (and SKYW) reciprocate?

Like old Ben Franklin said. If we don't hang together, we will CERTAINLY hang separately.
 
how much of a raise would we be getting right now if we had votes YES? that is, after the 1.9% we'd lose.



AAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA.:laugh: Man it could not have happened to a better group! I am truly sorry for those that were smart enough to vote for a Union, but hey.....I bet Jerry still loves you and your cuddling there nation! What a Deusheeee!
AAAAAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHA:laugh:
 
If we had a union we would be talking about a slightly higher pay raise (five years from now). I say lets take this one and then renegotiate again in 6 months to set the bar for the other regionals.
 
If we had a union we would be talking about a slightly higher pay raise (five years from now). I say lets take this one and then renegotiate again in 6 months to set the bar for the other regionals.
Man! Here's a guy looking at taking an incoming round or two. Sound thinking on your part but you better duck, Flyerdan. I think you may be being lined up in the crosshairs of the FI brain trust mass assault response team as I type.
 
Flyerdan said:
I say lets take this one and then renegotiate again in 6 months to set the bar for the other regionals.

In the interest of full disclosure, has Skywest ever "set the bar for the other regionals"?
 
If we had a union we would be talking about a slightly higher pay raise (five years from now). I say lets take this one and then renegotiate again in 6 months to set the bar for the other regionals.

Tell me, how do you renegotiate again in 6 months?

Your last pay increase was because of the ALPA drive. This current pay increase is to bring you to ASA pay levels (notice how the payrates are close, but short of ASA by just a few cents?) How are you going to get your management to the table to "negotiate" when you have no leverage or the law on your side?

If this does pass, next time you pass an ASA pilot, thank them for fighting for your pay raise.
 
In the interest of full disclosure, has Skywest ever "set the bar for the other regionals"?
The Profit Sharing plan at Skywest, Performance Rewards I think it's called, was introduced three years ago. ASA is still trying to catch up to that one. Same holding company. ASA got about 75% of the Skywest program with their new contract. Maybe they'll catch up with their next contract. There are some that doubt the 75% number but they don't understand their own contract yet. Anyway, ASA almost caught up with Skyweest with their last contract on that program so does that count for Skywest "setting the bar?"

The proposed pay scale at Skywest essentially equals the pay scale at ASA. 1 % COLA in each scale. Payscales essentially the same. Would you expect Skywest Inc. to offer Skywest pilots a whole lot more than they just agreed to pay ASA pilots? If so, why? What sense would it make for Skywest Inc. to pay Skywest pilots a whole lot more than ASA pilots? Because Skywest pilots think they "deserve" it? What sense would it make for Skywest pilots to expect a whole lot more form Skywest Inc.?

Reject it! Send it back to SAPA to "negotiate" more. What do you expect the outcome to be? A whole lot more? Why?

Ok, then. Reject it because you "deserve" more. Once you get past that emotional reaction, take a deep breath and look around and see where you are. How'd that work out when the offer was rejected in November, 2005? A year later, a new scale was approved in 2006. The new scale went into effect in January, 2007. Skywest pilots ought to reject this one because they "deserve" more. Right. See where that gets you. If you don't learn from history, you're doomed to repeat it. What's the history?
 
Extending the pay scale longevity decreases the value of the raise significantly. 20 years? 18 was way too long. Throw a few bucks toward the senior, new hire, and 120 pilot's on a <18 year scale. That would help everyone inside and outside of SkyWest.

Remember, none of us work in a vacuum.
 
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Tell me, how do you renegotiate again in 6 months?
Skywest current scale was approved by the pilots in late 2006. It had an expiration date of 2010. The scale has already been renegotiated and voting to approve or reject the new scale will start on January 20th and end on January 30th. The possiblity to renogitiate in 6 months exists at Skywest.

What do you think the chances of ASA's contract being renegotiated prior to the amendable date are?
 
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I would say Skywest did set the bar for flying the 700 (and now the 900) at 200 rates. The industry has hasn't recovered from that yet!
 
Different rates for those planes. Not what you'd like but different rates exist.


Skywest flew them for some time at the same rate, helping Skywest secure growth contracts and eventually some economies of scale advantages. The damage was done. Eventually they pacified the pilot group with a weak BHO.
 
Different rates for those planes. Not what you'd like but different rates exist.

It's not a payrate. It's a block hour override.

You don't get paid those rates while on vacation, during training, for your monthly guarantee, and more. You just get an extra 3 minutes pay per ever hour you sit in a 70/90.

By the way, your BHO payrates go all the way up to the 900 configured with 86 seats and a 175 configured to 98 seats. ASA's don't, they stop at 76. Anything over that needs to be negotiated. Think about that before you vote, you could be flying a 100-seat airplane for 5% more than a 50-seat airplane.
 

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