B19 Flyer
....
- Joined
- May 8, 2006
- Posts
- 1,595
And most frac pilots would be fully supportive of your stand. The goal is to pull wages up for all frac pilots and families, not to let them use the low wage stick to beat each other down. If the present managers won't get their act together and deal fairly with the workers they should be replaced by HIG. If HIG refuses to correct the situation the pilots are better off letting them fail. You are talented professionals with other options. It is flat-out wrong of the FLOPS to balance the budget on your backs and short-change your families rather than doing their job with the same level of attention to detail that they demand from the pilots. I admire you for the stand you're taking. NJW
A FAIR CONTRACT IS THE ONLY ACCEPTABLE SOLUTION. ANYTHING LESS SHOULD GET THE BOOT.
Hey, you.. the ignorant one with the boots... the non-pilot spitting out pro union propaganda with bad business sense... the one who doesn’t “get it” that bailed out of AA when they didn’t agree what APA negotiated, the one that doesn’t appreciate the efforts of non-pilots and their career investments, the one that thinks it’s OK to get paid when you volunteer, the one that thinks democracy is limited within a union by the type of certificate in their pocket. I could go on, but I want to get to the point.
The first time I made the statement, "you asked for a union, you got it" was a little less than two years ago in May, 2006.
In that same post, I made the statement, you've got at least three years of turmoil ahead of you, and the company isn't going to do anything for you while the contract is in negotiations. All companies in union negotiations freeze everything. Period. It’s basic business. You got what you asked for.
The other factual statement I've always made is how well unions react (or don't react) when the pressure is on the line and things get important. 1108 needs to get going before the economy gets much worse. The pressure is on and if they were as good as everybody says they are, 1108 should be able to convince management to get it done.
Now, two years after making that original statement, the FLOPS guys and all the pro-union protagonists such as you are still spitting out union turmoil on a daily basis, and the NJASAP process is another shining example of how the turmoil never ends.
You call me names and tell me I'm an idiot, but the CS guys are able to have their bar raised and the FLOPS guys can't because the union negotiations prevent it. Basic Business. It’s working exactly as I said it would 2 years ago. As it unfolds, I’ll be sure to remind you how accurate my factual information is. A union is a union, and they all act the same.
So far, what I’ve said has become true. One more year of turmoil, and my first prophecy comes true. Three years of turmoil and nothing gained.
Next, the economy is hitting the crapper and cycling in a direction that no pilot wants to see. Great time to be in negotiations guys, just brilliant, you swallowed the 1108 union koolaide while your non-union buddies over at CS stay non-union and ride off the contact at NJ. At this point, the CS guys are clearly in the better spot. Did they ride of the union “success” at NJ? If you want to call it success, that’s fine. But in the end, it’s the smartest group out there so far. Just like what Delta did. They are the least unionized airline and will be in the best spot to recover and keep the company as a viable entity with the least amount of turmoil.
The worsening economy doesn’t just hit airlines, it hit’s everybody. The bigger you are, the harder you fall. Those rich guys buying the fractional shares? You are only fooling yourself if you think that the economy isn’t going to hit them too. They know how to keep their money, they will travel less and there will be some kind of contraction in private jet use.
When it starts to slow, let’s see how that industry leading contract at NJ holds up. If things get tight, the ones laughing on these boards the most will be the handful of us choosing to work in non-union carriers that are able to react.
There is really nothing funny about having a union on the property though. When times are good, it’s easy to get on the bandwagon and yell cheers to the world, but when you are in a union carrier and it begins to go downhill it will go down a lot faster with a whole lot more pain and turmoil.
I hope I’m wrong about the economy and all that is happening, but when it’s all said and done, the CS and rest of the non-union fractional pilots will be in the best shape of all to look toward their futures while enjoying the least amount of turmoil.
You got what you asked for.