This is faulty reasoning. Perhaps you're on the outside looking in? Are you a NJA pilot G4? As a reminder, profits were being shifted from NJAmerica to subsidize NJEurope, at the expense of the pilot group. At the same time Mr. Santulli had left management of NJA to Boisture. Mr. Moisture (inside situational joke) stupidly used sticks like punitive scheduling instead of carrots like professional pay. Suffice it to say that things went to hell in a hand basket. It's no coincidence that shortly after the 2005 CBA was signed Boisture left. It appears he got the black boot...

and then things starting heading in the right direction.
The NJ pilots can verify this, but I've heard that Mr. Santulli made conciliatory remarks to the pilots (in a hangar meeting) to the affect that he let them down by not staying engaged and that it wouldn't happen again. True to his word, upper management was a willing partner in working with the pilots to make
voluntary contract improvements--3 years early, no less. As further evidence of his commitment to the concept that motivated pilots are more productive, a few others have also recently gotten the boot for not being team players.
NJE is now pulling its own weight and the joint Union-Management committees established in the 2005 contract have done excellent work at finding ways to make NJA more efficient. In fact, work done by the Union Training committee, who took the lead in redesigning the training program at NJA, saved the Company millions in training costs.
It is indisputable that respect and fair treatment made the difference. The NJ pilots deserve
every word of congratulations and appreciation they have been given (from Union
and Management leaders) for responding quickly and enthusiastically to the call for partnership.
As a matter of personal speculation, I have no doubt that when their Union leaders call for help in the next big project the NJ pilots will pull on their boots and roll up their shirt sleeves...
Congratulations to the entire NJA team!
Netjetwife