Here is my point, only 23 3-day trips.
Your assumption is incorrect. If you split apart a 4-day trip you come up with a 2-day and 3-day. Or 3-day and nap. I am not sure why you figure that they would choose to build a back-to-back 2 day over a 3-day. Bottom line, if you don't like 4-days, there will be less of them.
Several years ago, I held 3 day trips with weekends off. Unless you are top 10% you will never see that again.
I agree, but the flying we received from Delta was different in the 2006 time frame. Our stage lengths were longer (actually during the SKYW purchase we had longer stage lengths than they did, we did a lot of ATL-YUL, Upstate NY, MTY, etc.). We had the ATR to do ATL-CHA, ATL-CSG, etc. We also had consistent flying on every day of the week. I'm not taking the company's side on this, but it's hard to make a high-crediting 3-day trip when you can fly 5 legs on the CR2 and barely break 5 hours. The company can't easily fix this, because they don't determine the marketing schedule.
Besides that, I don't like having first come first serve future open time. Unless you live on the computer. Junior pilots will be getting trips that more senior pilots may want. Sure senior pilots are getting most of the open time I want, but that's the way it goes. Being junior comes with a price, and we were all junior at some point in time.
You use your seniority to bid for your schedule, therefore you're going to get most of what you want. Most major airlines have a first-come-first-serve open time system and you don't hear them scream about how unfair it is, rather they all love it. Talk to one of our senior FAs, they have the same system. I bet they'll speak in favor of it.
Seniority is still a factor in initial open time, where there is much more variety of open time. Once the month starts, there will be less incentive to trade for something because you would probably have what you want already.
The Flightline system will allow you to set text message alerts, so when a trip comes up that meets your criteria, you get a message. Then, you can swap for that trip instantly. I did this back in the day that we used Flica for line bidding and open time.
You'll get an answer if the swap was approved instantaneously, so no waiting a day to find out if you need to swap something else.
Also, why should we extend the contract by 2 years at a 1% pay raise, when we should be negotiating the new contract during this time. That would yield the average 3% pay raise from the end of the current contract. We are losing a 2% pay raise for those 2 years.
We are not extending the contract by 2 years. Just one, and we start negotiating at the same time. So we're not really losing anything, unless you think that we would have wrapped up in contract negotiations in 6 months (May 2010, when we opened negotiations, to Nov 2010, when our contract became amendable). Since our contract becomes amendable in Nov 2011 now, we get a 1% pay raise on that day, consistent with the DOS bumps in our contract currently.