That would be when they (AirTran, JetBlue, SWA) became a major airline. World Class...maybe not yet, but definitely not fly-by-night.
I said when did they cross the line from fly-by-night to world class...nothing else.
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That would be when they (AirTran, JetBlue, SWA) became a major airline. World Class...maybe not yet, but definitely not fly-by-night.
Once again you need to be told what responsibility means.
Yes, they do. Yes they are responsible.
Suddenly managment is the victim here. Why does SWA not have this problem. Why do insist on treating other people like trash and when the backlash comes you act surpised and judgemental?
Yet I am sure you actually believe this drivel you are posting here about management not being responsbile for their own company. Is a commanding officer responsible for his mens morale? The fact that I am actually schooling you on leadership and morale is telling....
Do you believe in civil disobedience? At what point do you stop taking sh!t and pushback? Have you no honor or integrity?
Who is responible for the buy in?
Who is responsbile for a growing, stable and profitable company??? The union?
Negative. the labor contract tells Fred what his cost are. Now his job is to manage those fixed cost over the terms of the contract. Naturally he will try and change it... but guess what... that is the purpose of a contract.
What is the difference between SWA labor and Spirits and UALs? You worked for UAL before you cut and ran... What are you saying about the UAL pilots? That Glenn is a good guy and the pilots, who took pay cuts and lost thier pensions to keep the company solvant all while Glenn and Co. took bonuses....... that the pilots are what.... say it....
Nicely said on a completely one-sided board. I always wonder, if these guys/gals have all the answers why are they not in management saving the airline industry.Rez this is all nonsense. It ..................Spirit's management is not Southwest, but face Spirit's employee group is not Southwest either. If Spirit goes under, so does it managment. Its all managements fault....sure right Rez, keep smokin whatever it is you are smokin, it seems like some really good $hit.
You worked for UAL before you cut and ran... What are you saying about the UAL pilots? That Glenn is a good guy and the pilots, who took pay cuts and lost thier pensions to keep the company solvant all while Glenn and Co. took bonuses....... that the pilots are what.... say it....
Yes they do. Spirit management sets the tone, if they want a hostile work environment they decide, if they want all parts of the airline on the same team they decide that too. It is not the pilots who decide what type of ramp worker is hired on. You are starting to sound a little uneducated on this topic, and spare us the "I've been fling since whenever" no one cares.
It is funny how during these negotiation/strike threads you can really see the management want to be types pipe right up with ignorant thoughts on topics they really know little if anything about.
Spirit has 20 firm orders for 320's with options for 30 more...the first one shows up March 5 and starts revenue flights on the 14th.
You ever see "Back to School" with Rodney Dangerfield? "Where should we base our imaginary business?" "How about Fantasy Land?" Well, my friend, that's where you're living.Lets get off the talking points here and talk about attitudes and culture.
Your pay and work conditions will be improved at the airline you work for if you work as a team to make the airline a success, not by some industry wide reciprocity of contracts.
Nicely said on a completely one-sided board. I always wonder, if these guys/gals have all the answers why are they not in management saving the airline industry.
I'm still wondering why your immediate supervisor hasn't slashed your pay to minimum wage. He/she/it is being a pure idiot not to do so with your continued quest on here to downgrade the profession as a hobby any high school drop out yokel should do for the fun of it. Here Pilotyip, here boy, here dog, another piece of jerky boy, now go fly anti-Sulley.
Surprise the personal attacks start. Keep selling the "us against them" line, see where it gets you.
You ever see "Back to School" with Rodney Dangerfield? "Where should we base our imaginary business?" "How about Fantasy Land?" Well, my friend, that's where you're living.
Southwest is the ONLY parallel you can draw where this works because they are the ONLY airline where management shares their success with their employees; jetBlue marginally does so, and only does when that employee group threatens seriously to organize and unionize. No other airline does.
For example: AirTran has made 8- to 9-figure profits 9 of the last 10 years. I have watched as AirTran went from an airline where pilots went OUT OF THEIR WAY, day after day, to help out the company, because the company honored the contract and seemed to be negotiating in good faith to now, where the pilots have NO interest in helping the bottom line by single-engine taxiing, not running the APU, not picking up trips when the airline has deliberately short-staffed, etc, etc. All because the company not only is STILL asking for pay CUTS when they've averaged a $110 Million dollar NET profit YEARLY for 7 of the last 10 years, but also has cut pilot pay with contract re-interpretations, taking reserve days away with little notice to keep pilots as close to guarantee as possible, reassignments galore, and a TON of little quality of life things that really anger people - that's NOT how you motivate your employees to help keep costs down.
The cold, hard facts are that ALPA EF&A have done the analysis and a Cost-of-living increase would cost the company $20-25 Million each year at both AirTran and Spirit. That's just the cost of doing business... Fuel goes up. Catering supplies go up. Parts costs, equipment (aircraft and ground) and gate leases go up. But salaries are supposed to remain flat or go DOWN?
No WONDER pilots are increasingly disinterested in helping out. Now I'd REALLY like for you to explain to me how, when a company is PROFITABLE, it consistently demands LOWER pilot pay and, when it can't get it, TAKES it from the pilots one way or another, just exactly WHY everyone is supposed to continue to go above and beyond to save money and make the operation work?
THAT'S why you and YIP are bashed so hard on this board. You're advocating on taking a pay CUT every year in the equivalent of taking NO raises with increasing costs of living (my money spends substantially less now than it did 10 years ago as I'm now making the same thing I did in 2000), all while your company is making money? Sorry, that's not how it's supposed to work.
If a company is in trouble and losing money ever year? OK, work with the company to remain afloat. Spirit is in no such danger, and neither is AirTran. Your arguments do NOT fit the circumstances.
In all honesty our schedules are no worse than any other airline schedule...and we have the one diamond in our expired contract the 4 days off between trips.
We don't agree to a "steaming pile" company proposal. Simple. We keep talking. Striking is NOT a negotiating tool. Striking is a statement of labors choice to resign rather than continue under the current conditions.I guess what I am wondering mostly is why would we agree to that steaming pile of a contract that management is offering? I would certainly be much more happy with no changes to the current contract and keep the 4 days off then get a huge raise and go to 2 days off between trips...my .02.
We still have a contract and full RLA protection.
I am curious. What do you guys think will happen during and after the strike? I am skeptical you will just get anything you want, not when an arbitrator looks at what other airlines are doing, the economy, and how many pilots are on the street. I believe that after a few weeks Spirit management will just declare bankruptcy and blame the strike. Spirit pilots will come back to work with no contract instead of a bad contract and somehow ALPA will still proclaim a moral victory. But hey what do I know? You guys have made it evidently clear that despite a history of over 30 years worth of post deregulation labor/management battles with exactly the same outcome, that this time it will somehow be different.
ALPA: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
Conservatives believe that government must be restrained and controlled precisely because it’s made up of flawed human beings, “the governed.” This is why they’re willing to allow corporations to take powers — like controlling our health-care system — that they would never allow to government. Corporations are essentially independent entities and totally without morality (and, thus, without immorality or evil). Being amoral they’re less dangerous in the conservative mind than a government controlled by humans, particularly the vast majority of people (whom John Adams called “the rabble”) because those people are, at their core, evil.
The conservatives’ core belief is that if our essential (evil) human nature is not restrained by something — God or priests or corporate bosses [? also humans] — harm will come to society. This is why conservative morality is nearly always focused on restraining individual behavior, particularly private behavior (With whom you are having sex and in what positions or ways? What you are smoking, drinking or snorting? Is there a fetus growing inside you?). And why they’re enthusiastic to “privatize” functions of government, taking the commons out of the hands of We the (evil) People and putting it into the hands of morality-neutral corporations that, in their minds, answer only to a mechanistic and morally neutral “free market.”
I am curious. What do you guys think will happen during and after the strike? I am skeptical you will just get anything you want, not when an arbitrator looks at what other airlines are doing, the economy, and how many pilots are on the street. I believe that after a few weeks Spirit management will just declare bankruptcy and blame the strike. Spirit pilots will come back to work with no contract instead of a bad contract and somehow ALPA will still proclaim a moral victory. But hey what do I know? You guys have made it evidently clear that despite a history of over 30 years worth of post deregulation labor/management battles with exactly the same outcome, that this time it will somehow be different.
ALPA: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
Negative. Your weak argument is repetitive all while you expect a different result.
Let's zoom out and look at this from a marco view.
First off, the pushback you are getting is from pilots who work an honorable profession and have a fair and reasonable expectation to be compensated. It is offensive when you come on this board and basically suggest that they continue to live a diminished lifestyle that is not commensurate with the profession. Safety cost money.
In addition, ALPA's E&FA has looked at the company financials and knows what is reasonable and fair to negotiate. Also, the nmb mediator is involved and moderates the negotiations. Simply put, what you can't comprehend is well within guidelines of the law for fairness and reasonability.
Zoom out a bit more and we can see the classic lines of conservative thought in your posts: (not my quote)
This has been your mantra from day one... putting full faith in the amoral Captains of Industry, including the management team of Spirit Air. Giving them carte blanc all while chiding professional pilots for wanting fair and reasonable compensation afforded them with the constraints of the law.
Another fine example is the bailouts. Conservatives like you have no problem with a Wall St. bailout, even though the suits knew the risk they were taking would be socialized all while they would privatize the gains. Yet when Obama bails out GM suddenly that is bad because of him and the unions involved.
Representation is a fundamental right in the country and unionization provides that. This should be respected by all citizens, yet most, especially conservatives gladly had over their livelihood to another citizen (corporate bosses) because these bosses are amoral, captains of industry, despite the fact that they are human (greedy).
In the end it all comes down to what you choose to believe to provide a level of comfort. However, ignorance is bliss and when one reaches a level of comfort it is really a position of regression. For hard core right wingers, ideology, not reason and logic are the mental processes that "lead the way". The future lies in the past.
Righty ho there sport. You got this game called or am I just being sarcastic. I guess the Hawaiian pilots really f**ked up in their new contract their Air GI Joe. Gosh, how could your blanket attitude towards negotiating professional pilot compensation possibly skip over that carrier. That's in addition to completely ignoring the battle scars of broken carriers has an infinite more times to do with the race to the bottom "hey Bob, let's start up airline" investor get rich quick managements teams then with the ranks of professional pilots and their compensation level.
I wouldn't get all cozy in mindset of mentor PilotYip. He's the same nitwit that thinks high school drop out's do fine in this line of career and who also has proclaimed his reckless disregard for Federal Aviation Regulations by stating a pilot should never challenge MEL's. Don't be that unethical dip.
I am starting to wonder if AirCobra is one of our new "Top Gun" management types? AirCobra, you wouldn't have been a part of Skybus, would you? Then that scam JetAmerica? If so, then his posts are inline with who he is.
The problem is that you're one of the only 2 or 3 people advocating a "let's play nice with management even as they continually degrade our income and quality of life even as they are profitable" approach. When you are outnumbered 10 to 1 in your thought process, I would suggest that it's YOUR thought process that's skewed from reality, statistically-speaking.
I am starting to wonder if AirCobra is one of our new "Top Gun" management types? AirCobra, you wouldn't have been a part of Skybus, would you? Then that scam JetAmerica? If so, then his posts are inline with who he is.
You are correct...it does sound like his nonsensical rantings, "like in NASCAR there are no points for second place" what a moron, especially with NASCAR...they give out points for taking a pit stop. Anyway...
I should add that the Spirit MEC tried a lets cooperate approach with management, it was at best a complete failure for the pilot group--and a success for the chosen ones.
The problem is that you're one of the only 2 or 3 people advocating a "let's play nice with management even as they continually degrade our income and quality of life even as they are profitable" approach. When you are outnumbered 10 to 1 in your thought process, I would suggest that it's YOUR thought process that's skewed from reality, statistically-speaking.
As far as REAL self-examination of where we have failed as a union? That's easy:
1. Failure to see the dangers of deregulation and have a lobbying group in place to fight it back when it occurred.
2. Failure to see the dangers of Scope degradation and allowing ANY flying to be farmed out from the major airline to any "partner".
3. Failure to see the dangers of lack of Pension Reform and not lobbying strongly enough to protect from the corporate raiding of the Pension funding when markets surged suddenly, providing a nice source of cash for executive bonuses.
4. Failure to provide some type of segregation between bargaining units of a parent Major and its feeders (Delta vs ASA/Comair etc). Thereby having the same parent agent fighting for the same flying between brands and making it difficult for ALPA to engage in any meaningful "take it back" approach to Scope erosion.
5. Failure to enact some type of "minimum acceptable compensation" point for each type of aircraft flying and apply it across the board, no matter how financially solvent (or insolvent) an airline is? Can't afford to pay those pilots that fair wage? Then you shouldn't be in business.
6. Failure to lobby effectively for an end to government subsidizing of airlines and an end to multiple bankruptcy protections for airlines. Airlines should NOT be able to continually fly a route UNDER THE BREAK-EVEN PRICE TO PRODUCE THAT ROUTE and the government should not get to subsidize that route just to get some type of service to rural areas. You want to subsidize an airline? Re-regulate the industry as a whole. Otherwise, let airlines succeed or die based on their ability to be profitable.
7. Failure to create a guild entrance gatekeeper, similar to the AMA or ABA, thereby allowing any kid with deep-pocketed parents to buy their way into a job, regardless of their ability to fly and, more importantly, devaluing that job to those kids who didn't have to work that hard to obtain it. Arguably, if I can spend a summer and get all my ratings while going surfing every afternoon, I submit to you that it's easy to get into this profession and it shouldn't be.
Problems to the above?
Prices would probably double for airline tickets nearly overnight. Of course, arguably, this has needed to happen for some time. This is the ONLY industry I can think of where the price of the product has DECLINED by 50-60% over time as inflation and the CPI increases 2-3% yearly, despite the fact that the cost to produce the product has risen almost linearly with the CPI.
There would be a greatly-diminished demand for the product that would put a lot MORE pilots out of work. Arguably, there's too many of us as it is. See point #7 above.
Management would fight it all tooth and nail. You talk about how we'd solve things that management didn't create? You forget one crucial detail: it's management and the ATA that management created as its lobbying agent that helped obtain almost all of the above issues. Management has been thinking 3-4 steps ahead of pilots for DECADES... that's why the NPRM from the FAA on the increased ATP standards for 121 flying has a loophole in it for future ab-initio programs. They won't be needed for a decade, but the loophole is there and, if it's not closed, we'll be arguing about this in another 12-15 years how we missed yet ANOTHER problem.
Bottom line is that without a HUGE push-back from ALPA (or any large, organized group of pilots), we're NEVER going to get back to where this career was even 15-20 years ago (and yes, I was flying then, too). They've taken SO MUCH over the years, that getting ANY of it back is going to appear to be asking for HUGE gains from management and yes, it will cost a LOT of VERY REAL money to obtain.
YIP and I have had this argument ad-nauseum, you're just coming late to the show. The sad fact is that gaining those things back is going to put 10-15% of the pilot force out of work and shut down a few airlines along the way. It's going to be painful. It's going to be a long and arduous process. But either we do it or we resign ourselves to the fact that we're going to make less and be treated worse than our blue-collar Garbage collectors / plumbers / bus drivers in this country.
You can resign yourself to that after I've retired.
It's ONE of the answers. All of them are relatively painful:So a return to regulation and elimination of a lot of pilot jobs is the answer? Great for senior guys, not too good for anyone else.