Secondly, UAL ALPA and the lawsuit. Sure, that was going to be a tough deal. But it was a must win and you didn't. You got b!tchslapped and you had an unlimited budget from ALPA. Would CAL ALPA have won? I don't know...maybe not. But I have no doubt that if another airline had dropped the ball UAL ALPA would be calling for them to fall on their sword.
Let's be realistic here. We have a large (and getting smaller) MCF, but it's not "unlimited." We didn't lose for lack of money. We lost because the judge found that UA ALPA is responsible for "illegal job actions" under the RLA
whether or not ALPA actually organized them. So if a bunch of guys are pissed off and decide to call in sick in a given month (for example), whether ALPA knows about it or not, whether ALPA organized it or not, ALPA is responsible- or at least that's what the Judge said. UA ALPA is taking a very aggressive stance against management and unfortunately we got screwed over yet again over an unfavorable interpretation of the RLA. Nobody needs to "fall on their sword." I hope other pilot groups take aggressive stances against their management as well, and if it leads to some lawsuits....well....that's the price we pay for putting up a bit of a fight.
Retirement age change needed to be phased in. Or made no limit at all. To manage expectations would have been to at least acknowledge that there would be pain at the bottom of the profession.
Yeah, you're assuming Prater can just "manage expectations" and make that happen. What if he "managed" that expectation but that's not
your "managed expectation?" What if that's not
my "managed expectation?" Can I or that person come on flightinfo.com and complain about how ALPA isn't "managing expectations" according to my particular definiton of "managed expectations" and MF ALPA? I mean, that's what you're doing, isn't it? ALPA didn't do a "phase in" or "no limit at all" so therefore you're pissed. How does ALPA come up with a way to "manage" the tens of thousands of expectations we all have in such a way that we're all happy?
Further, ALPA can't just walk into the halls of Congress and say, "this is the way it's going to be." But let's say Prater got a gradual "phase in" as you suggest. You criticize ALPA for the lawsuits that it's going to be facing about the "hard" Age 60 cutoff. How many lawsuits would there be if we "phased it in" for example? We'd just be changing one class action suit for another. I fail to see how
any cutoff will please all pilots.
Acknowledge that there would eventually be medical standard changes instead of simply declaring that no change for two years was a victory.
Maybe that was a victory? Maybe there were some members of Congress who wanted more stringent medical requirements NOW for guys flying over Age 60? Maybe another Congressperson raised his hand and said, "if medical requirement XYZ is required for a 61 year old, shouldn't a 31 year old be required to pass that requirement as well? They're flying the same airplane, right?" Now maybe we end up in a situation where we have a bunch of guys making rash changes to medical requirements that suddenly affect ALL pilots. Then maybe we have some ALPA pilots under the age of 60 unable to pass these new requirements. Now they're MF'ing ALPA because they could fly before and now they can't make a living.
The above is conjecture on my part, but it wouldn't surprise me if something like that could have happened. So now we get a breather to figure out what needs to be done before any rash changes are made. Maybe Prater was "managing medical expectations" by getting that passed?
Managing expectations would have been to show that in addition to making a pilot able to work longer, ALPA was going to help pilots actually reach a retirement.
Isn't that what all ALPA members strive for? Isn't that what we collectively try for with every contract? I don't need Prater telling me about the obvious.
Acknowledging that simply working longer wasn't necessarily going to mean being able to retire. Just look at where we are now: Do you think guys who work to 65 in this current environment are going to be better off than they were at 60?
Yeah, I do. A widebody Captain at United will make over a million dollars over that 5 years. If he invests like a typical pilot, however.......
Prater needed to have a game plan laid out that showed the exact strategy we were going to use to make this a career again. He didn't do that because he doesn't care. He only cares about the senior types aged 55+. Period.
I don't believe that Prater only cares about senior types aged 55+. Could he lay out a better, more clear strategy? Sure. You can always do something better.
You're going to end up losing another lawsuit to the age 60+ guys I'm afraid. We're all going to be paying assesments for ten years to a bunch of geezers who really don't want to work now at all. And BTW, stanby for Prater to admit he was wrong (about the time he's retiring) and crank a homerun out of the park for them and seal the deal.
We would have ended up with a lawsuit no matter where the cutoff was. The only thing that would have changed is who (i.e whoever was on the wrong side of any designed cut-off) was suing ALPA. No matter how you design an Age 60 cutoff, someone feels they get screwed. They then sue. And of course, it's ALPA's fault.