AA and SWA guys are right to be "suspicious" but wrong to just utterly dismiss PBS. It would be like "no, I don't want a sharper kitchen knife because then I might cut myself more easily." (?....)
PBS might be a very good tool that is light-years ahead of line-of-time style bidding...or it might be the equivalent of a "sodomizer" that makes everyone's life miserable.
It is all in how much of an active role that the union takes in both selecting the PBS product as well as overseeing its implementation.
At DAL we were heavily involved from the outset, and remain heavily involved now. No PBS bid runs are released until approved by the (union) PBS Committee. I don't know of one pilot out of 50 at DAL that would rather go back to our LOT system.
That said, I know that other airlines have used PBS to ramrod through a miserable world to their pilots, and I have no doubt that DAL would do the same if they could...but they can't.
And last, to all the PBS-bashers who wax eloquent about how wonderful LOT bidding is, I have two questions.
1. Is it really better sorting through hundreds of lines, just to find a handful that contain everything you want (which you probably won't be senior enough to get)? Then you have to go through infinite gyrations after the original bid awards, dropping, picking up, and swapping trips all over the place, just so you can get the trips and days off that PBS would have had a much better chance of getting you the first time around?
2. Why do you cling so firmly to lines of time...when it is MANAGEMENT that creates those lines! Why is the ability of a pilot to at least direct the creation of his own schedule as he sees fit criticized, while the ability of supposedly despised management to create your lines--as THEY see fit--celebrated? I don't get it.
I will bet that if SWA and AA pilots reluctantly agreed to PBS (not that that is going to happen, nor do I really care) and had a rigorous oversight process like we have at DAL, within a year or two, most guys would not want to go back. That said, it is a staffing concession, and I will admit, if I were an AA pilot, with tons of guys on the street, I wouldn't want to give mgmt any more efficiencies either.