It's a matter of career expectations, Joey. No matter how long you work at ASA, you'll never fly a 767 and make $200k per year. The NSL shouldn't provide you with an opportunity to bump the 13 year senior DAL FO from bidding to that 767 slot, because he did have expectations for that slot and income. I'm sorry Joey, but your regional years simply aren't worth as much in terms of career earnings. It's just a simple fact that a 20 year ASA career is worth far less than a 20 year Delta career. You want a windfall (again), and that's just unacceptable.
I find it interesting that PCL's argument is all about monetary expectations. If that is truely all that the NSL is about, we have a serious problem. If a 20 year UAL veteran is going to come to SKYW, at what level will he be paid? The SKYW 20 year rate? The UAL rate? What if he was on the 737 vs. the 747? If it's going to be what he was GETTING paid, why would SKYW be held accountable for allowing said pilot to continue to live the life to which he has become accustomed at another carrier which they had no control over?? Legally, that's impossible.
If it's not about how much money and more about just having A job, then it shouldn't matter what size airplane you fly. We all fly self-loading cargo, and I daresay we all know that at the end of the day, your job gets easier the further up the chain you go, so I fail to see your reasoning why length of service at a major is more valuable than a regional pilot's. Are we
really still in the mindset that bigger iron makes you more of a "REAL" pilot? Yes, I'll concede that flying 300 passengers into Bejing or Mumbai involves a fair amount more risk and responsibility than taking 50 people from DEN to Rapid City, SD. The problem is, a furloughed UAL pilot at SKYW will be doing just that: DEN to RAP (over and over and over...) Why should he get paid more and have instant superseniority because of what he USED to do?
If inroads are really going to be made, we have to stop the wild assumption that the longer you've had your @ss in the seat, the better you are. This, of course, would never happen, because let's say we make pay based on hours flown rather than years of service (just as irrelevant). Thus, when I (no turbine PIC) get hired at DAL along with a guy who has 4000 hours of 121 turbine PIC, he gets paid commensurate with his experience and more than I do. Just like a seasoned cardiologist would get paid more than a kid fresh out of med school. The problem with that is, where is the incentive for DAL to hire the regional captain?? Sure, he's flown more hours without killing anyone and proven he has some level of command ability, but he's a drain on the bottom line. Of course, we all know a
merit-based pay system would be completely impossible to impliment and would go over like a lead balloon anyway.
Seniority is everything. It dictates where you can be based, what equipment you can fly, and whether or not you get to see your kids on weekends and holidays. But if the option is to abrogate my seniority in my corner of the industry with the hollow promise that it establishes my place in line to one day maybe get hired at a carrier that might not even exist a few years from now... I'd rather leave the system as it is. This may just be impossible to fix, and UAL's attempts to do so now stink of desperate opportunism as their ship starts to go down in flames.