General,
I appreciate the clear non-attacking response. I hope that scope is tightened and that there is a place for me when the dust settles.
Just a bit of history - Mesaba under the Swenson(?) Brothers ownership bought a little charter company in Orlando called AirTran. They had 3 or 6 737's that flew no where near MSP or NWA hubs that I know of.
Within a week, NWA came to Mesaba and offered to sue/cancel the ASA because they were not going to have a subcontractor use their money in this fashion. Mesaba was a different company. AirTran was a different certificate. All the reasons you described in your great response. And NWA came in and said "Get rid of them". The Swenson Bro's were forced to sell Mesaba and went to Orlando where they eventually sold the certificate to ValueJet.
So my original question about the EMB190's and A318's isn't without precedent.
People talk about how tough life is under Delta. But I know NWA would have never signed agreements like they did with Skywest and ASA for 80% RJ capacity out of a hub. NWA would never have given up that much control.
We are losing SAAB's which just baffles me. But to anybody at Mesaba longer than 5 years, it's just another beating.
Good Afternoon
Not all of my posts are confrontational. I enjoy a good debate and prefer not to slam. Again, I have nothing against most RJ pilots (some on here need a slap or two), and hope that ALL of us do better with pay and people move up and onward towards financial stability. I do. There are people that are lazy and want more at their level, even though it will hurt the industry, all because he/she doesn't want to leave and "start over", and prefers to keep his/her 4 weeks of Summer vacation in MYR. Those people are my targets.
I remember the original Air Tran very well. They flew 737s out of MCO, and the went as far West as San Antonio. It was under a seperate certificate, and never competed against NWA directly. After the Valuejet crash in MIA, that company needed to hide it's identity, and they bought the smaller Air Tran and transformed themselves into a totally different airline, and have done well ever since. I think we do have to watch these smaller carriers (like SunCountry), since they can eventually evolve into larger competitors. Scope is very important, and the guys we just elected here in ATL are very aware of that, and ran on that premise. They will be held accountable if they slip and give in---and it is doubtful that this group will. Also, we now have the "cobras" from NWA on our side, which should give us some "backbone" when it comes to any potential work action.
As far as how much control Delta has given to regionals at our hubs, I think after the Comair strike Delta has deverisfied a lot more. Not all of the flights go to one carrier, and there is a good mix out there. I have seen Mesaba at SLC and JFK. I have seen SkyWest at ATL and MSP. I think we should keep it that way. What we want is for Delta to do better, grow, and hire more of you. That is good for you and me.
As to why DL is giving up on Saabs, I don't know. Remember, our leaders were the NWA leaders, so they know all about Mesaba and the intra upper Midwest stuff. This is not new to them. Maybe it is not worth it, the EAS money.
Bye Bye--General Lee