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SWA/FL Codeshare

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Bingo. Two carriers that happened to fly a 737, the rest of the differences were pretty dramatic. You can't re-write history on how far apart these two companies were.

Pretty dramatic indeed. One carrier was growing quickly their near international destinations, opening new domiciles, adding new cities, making sure they were technologically advanced to press into the future, finding ways to generate ancillary income (like every other airline) enabling a price undercut of the competition, and actually utilizing all the automation (increased safety) the airplane came with.

...and then there's Southwest.

You're right. The similarities end with the fact that we both fly 737's, except one company blows part of my profit sharing check out the tailpipe every time they taxi.
 
Pretty dramatic indeed. One carrier was growing quickly their near international destinations, opening new domiciles, adding new cities, making sure they were technologically advanced to press into the future, finding ways to generate ancillary income (like every other airline) enabling a price undercut of the competition, and actually utilizing all the automation (increased safety) the airplane came with.

...and then there's Southwest.

You're right. The similarities end with the fact that we both fly 737's, except one company blows part of my profit sharing check out the tailpipe every time they taxi.
That sums up the truth. Too bad folks like scoreboard...ahh never mind not worth my time.
 
I can't fight your fight, nor would I ever entertain SWAPA fighting your fight, sorry. Higher pay to you is less pay to me. We are competitors until closing. Now that we are closed, it's a different story to be sure, but SWAPA asking SWA to raise AT rates is justified how? DFR's would fly from the rafters if SWAPA fights one inch of ALPA issues, sorry.


This disparity in pay evaporates in 24 months and 21 days, so, SWAPA needs not spend one shred of SWAPA goodwill to help AT raise their rates, they have their guys fighting for them.

Dude, you are as clueless as SC. Do you really think AT is a competitor!?

Phred.
 
Bingo. Two carriers that happened to fly a 737, the rest of the differences were pretty dramatic. You can't re-write history on how far apart these two companies were.

Wow, what a pair of mushrooms. :rolleyes:

You're either r-e-a-l-l-y senior, or really stupid.
 
I have to say I hate hearing this "relative" example.
That's because you're not the one who's getting your Quality of Life hammered when you "cross the partition" (when there shouldn't be a "partition", it should have been one group on FAA SOC like nearly every other airline merger out there). You simply aren't looking at it from our perspective, and the truth is that very little changes for you with this deal because your management team went to bat for you.

Especially when almost 15% of the Southwest pilots were hired even before your predecessor started operations.
Wow. A WHOLE 15%? A whole WHOPPING 15%? That's just crazy talk right there... ;)

It's funny that my relative seniority didn't move up 60-70%. And even though both were "non bankrupt, profitable carriers", I would argue that the similarities end there.
Hey, math doesn't lie. I was bidding in the top 200 F/O's of a nearly 900 pool of F/O's (approx). That's roughly the top 20%.

Now I'm in the BOTTOM 20% of F/O's, NEARLY THE BOTTOM 10% bidding at 88%, courtesy of losing 2.5 years of seniority when SWA was hiring 800+ a year. That's nearly a 70% relative loss of bidding power, no matter HOW you slice it, which is why I've been bypassing on our training bids to come over there. Too big of a seniority hit, especially until all the guys junior to me HERE come over there and plug the reserve holes in the West Coast bases. 7 people have come out of MCO from the right seat of the 737, leaving me bidding #1 and I like it.

Twist it any way you want, but your own pilots on here have admitted that being that low on the totem pole, I'm going to be sitting reserve somewhere and I won't be able to manipulate my schedule like you guys talk about until I'm well above the 50% mark, which doesn't happen in the F/O ranks until I'm about 48, and NEVER happens when I upgrade at close to age 55, barring some pretty serious double-digit growth somewhere between now and then. I'm going to retire working weekends and holidays flying 6 legs a day through East Texas. Awesome.

You can be "tired of hearing it" all you want, but the truth doesn't die just because you don't like it. I'm stuck with it, but I haven't brought it up on here lately unless other people (like you) make some comment like the above or say something else erroneous about the integration like one of our own, Old Man Pilot back on page 5. I didn't say squat about it until then.

I will quit mentioning it as long as people simply shut up about it. Again, sorry you don't like hearing the truth that WE ARE GOING TO BE LIVING. The numbers are what the numbers are. Period. The end.
 
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Pretty dramatic indeed. One carrier was growing quickly their near international destinations, opening new domiciles, adding new cities, making sure they were technologically advanced to press into the future, finding ways to generate ancillary income (like every other airline) enabling a price undercut of the competition, and actually utilizing all the automation (increased safety) the airplane came with.

...and then there's Southwest.

You're right. The similarities end with the fact that we both fly 737's, except one company blows part of my profit sharing check out the tailpipe every time they taxi.


Don't forget that one carrier's pairings are commutable on both ends, and can be traded with open time up to 24 hours before report time, or simply dropped back to the Company altogether.

I sure hope SWAPA's Scheduling Committee is taking a good, hard look at what AAI has gotten, before it's gone.
 
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Twist it any way you want, but your own pilots on here have admitted that being that low on the totem pole, I'm going to be sitting reserve somewhere and I won't be able to manipulate my schedule like you guys talk about until I'm well above the 50% mark, which doesn't happen in the F/O ranks until I'm about 48, and NEVER happens when I upgrade at close to age 55, barring some pretty serious double-digit growth somewhere between now and then. I'm going to retire working weekends and holidays flying 6 legs a day through East Texas. Awesome.


SUCKS TO BE YOU.....East Texas ain't that bad. You will fit in quit well, you know what they say...Notin bit queers and steers, so I take it you don't have a tail and horns
 
I can't believe I'm gonna feed this troll, but here goes...

Your union has continued to forget about it's new members.

You obviously weren't around when Delta bought Pan Am's Atlantic routes (you know, the ones that turned Delta from a mostly domestic to international carrier), taking pilots OUT of seniority order. The only guys who could go to Delta were those current and qualified on the 727 or A310. The #1 747 guy on the list was SOL while a 727 FE got to go.


Same pay for same equipment (737) is just basic.

I guess it was too basic for Delta too. The transistioned Pan Am guys didn't get Delta pay for 27 months from the time they became Delta pilots. And they were flying DELTA AIRPLANES, with DELTA UNIFORMS and getting DELTA paychecks..... And they were the lucky ones.

The guys that stayed at Pan Am, who were wholly owned by Delta, didn't fare so well. Wanna talk about getting hosed?

Why wait until 2015? Ridiculous. That is called a JOINT contract? This slow gradual migration over to the Corndog side is also ridiculous. You know that. You don't get paid SWA wages until you go to school? Huh?

Why did the Pan Am guys, who were now Delta pilots, wearing Delta uniforms flying Delta airplanes, have to wait over 2 years AFTER they were Delta pilots to get Delta pay?

While they were certainly happy to have jobs, the Pan Am "Aquired Airmen" don't have much nice to say about how they were treated by Delta or DALPA. And they were roughly 600 PA guys integrated into a 10K (IIRC) pilot group and most of the Capts were retired within 10 years.
 
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