Max Powers
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2005
- Posts
- 1,136
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86 to 256 furloughs
Line values for Sept and Oct 70 hours
Company will seek voluntary leave of absence first
NPA will counter that Training guys go first, company will counter that probationary pilots are not "line pilots' therefore they can be terminated.
Were those number given as: "definitively stated by the company" or a best guess?
No doubt...Lastly, for the love of god press 4 and the star button on your phone to mute it so the 150+ folks on the line dont have to listen to your dog bark or kid scream....actually, maybe it was not kids screaming
I couldn't get my phone to unmute. I tried to hit 4* many times with no luck. Most my questions were answered anyway.
Lastly, for the love of god press 4 and the star button on your phone to mute it so the 150+ folks on the line dont have to listen to your dog bark or kid scream....actually, maybe it was not kids screaming
-It is true that management has threatened the NPA with termination of pilots as opposed to furlough if something is not negotiated to keep training department as is. I would assume they would not even have to abide by seniority if they terminate which would allow them to just fire 737 or 717 guys thus reducing training costs. MB said they have no idea the legality or impact that would have.
The NPA will continue to negotiate with the company for other LOA's regardless of the fact that the last one is probably going to put more people on the street AND no progress is being made on our contract.
-Furloughs are a very good possibility and MB said anything from 70-over200 depending on how many planes we end up with and how low the block hours go. But nothing official from the company. The union is working on ways to try and mitigate the numbers.(except the LOA's which seem to continue to help the company and doom jr pilots.)
-The training department guy has pulled his request to return to the line.
I got disconnected after the first couple questions so I don't know what happened from there. I was pretty disgusted though.
There is this little teensy thing called a "class-action lawsuit" that would likely be the result of that decision. I don't have my calculator handy, but "100 fired pilots times career expectations" is several hundred million dollars' worth of exposure that they'd be fools to accept. . . . not everything has to be settled under the RLA.They have spoiled every last drop of goodwill with this pilot group and a mass firing might be a door closer for this company. I just don't think the company is willing to risk so much to give a hundred probation pilots walking papers not knowing the ramification of it all.
Ummm... yeah, they did.From S&P.
"We think AAI is likely to benefit from
scaled back industry capacity in its markets, allowing
for yield gains in excess of the industry
average."
Ehem... The BOD said publicly they are not getting rid of airplanes. Until they annouce that I think these furlough possiblities don't make any sense.
Ummm... yeah, they did.
Conference call, MB said the company, "depending on who you talk to - maintenance or ops", is getting rid of anywhere from 1 to 4 airframes in the immediate future (I type fast, have notes of almost the entire call).
That combined with an announced capacity cut of 5% in September of '08 compared with September of '07 equals a total reduction of flying of between 16-18% from August planned flying to September planned flying.
If the LVI for 1,800 pilots is 94 hours, that's a total of 169,200 hours for the month of August.
169,200 * .74 (16% reduction in block hours - most conservative estimate) = 125,208 block hours for September, divided by 1,800 pilots = 69.56 block hours per pilot. The company HATES paying soft time, and will avoid it at nearly all costs.
It's going to be VERY close... and that's just ballparking it. The NPA has guys that are MUCH better at staffing models than me working on the Sched Committee and if MB thinks there's reason to believe cuts are coming, then you'd be a smart person to at least prepare for it.
I agree, a LOT of crap coming from the company is scare tactics, and there's no reason to panic, but only an idiot wouldn't start preparing his or her financial plan accordingly if they're in the bottom 200-250 of the list.
Ummm... yeah, they did.
Conference call, MB said the company, "depending on who you talk to - maintenance or ops", is getting rid of anywhere from 1 to 4 airframes in the immediate future (I type fast, have notes of almost the entire call).
That combined with an announced capacity cut of 5% in September of '08 compared with September of '07 equals a total reduction of flying of between 16-18% from August planned flying to September planned flying.
If the LVI for 1,800 pilots is 94 hours, that's a total of 169,200 hours for the month of August.
169,200 * .74 (16% reduction in block hours - most conservative estimate) = 125,208 block hours for September, divided by 1,800 pilots = 69.56 block hours per pilot. The company HATES paying soft time, and will avoid it at nearly all costs.
It's going to be VERY close... and that's just ballparking it. The NPA has guys that are MUCH better at staffing models than me working on the Sched Committee and if MB thinks there's reason to believe cuts are coming, then you'd be a smart person to at least prepare for it.
I agree, a LOT of crap coming from the company is scare tactics, and there's no reason to panic, but only an idiot wouldn't start preparing his or her financial plan accordingly if they're in the bottom 200-250 of the list.
That's much better. Thanks for taking the time to break it down, I don't have access to all the latest numbers, just guestimates...Here is some better numbers for ya Lear70 for July 2008:
Total Block Hours 717 = 31030
Total Block Hours 737 = 22183
B717 LVI = 85.9
Total Pilots Bidding 717 = 904
Total Pilots Bidding 737 = 660
Total Airtran Block Hours X 2 seats = 106,426
Total Pilots Bidding both airplanes = 1564
Avg block hours per pilot company wide = 68 hours (816 annual basis)
Bring LVI from 85.9 in July to 70 in September is about a 18% reduction.
We have close to 1700 pilots on list but only about 1564 bid (rest in office, union business, medical, or loa).