Agreed, and I'll say again that a pilot's worth has nothing to do with the financial condition of his airline.
But for some reason you keep ignoring the USAir pilots' career expectations in 2005: over a third of their list already furloughed with more coming.
Career expectations are subjective. That is basically my problem with the merger process formerly known as ALPA's. It pits one group against another--severely. USAir was done furloughing. They had a "subsidiary" set up. You ignore the fact that during the SLI hearings, USAir was actively recalling. By the time the list actually was emailed out from Niccolau, every pilot was back at USAir who wanted to be.
Bottom line, if you are going to pick
1 day (known as a PID) to define a pilot's
career expectations, you will wildly miss the mark every time. At the same time, them's the rules. So my retort is that on that
one day, USAir was a viable company, and every pilot on their list had the opportunity to engage in widebody, global flying. Their
twiceBK contract darn near equaled America Wests non-bk contract in terms of strict compensation. I don't know enough about the intangibles to say with fairness the actual value of the two contracts. BK is temporary. Delta did it, and look at them now. UAL did it and look at them now. CAL did it and look at them now. Suffice to say,
any speculation on the pending demise of USAir is just that, speculation and IMO has no place in the mediation of an airline pilot seniority list. Career expectations are a farce. They are determined by history, on the day each pilot retires. If you want to look at the history of the two airlines, they speak for themselves
AWA in 2005 was hiring and had scheduled growth airplane deliveries. Add to that the USAir BK-decimated contract and that's why George Nicolau stated: "This necessarily means that career expectations differed and that US Airways pilots had more to gain from the merger than their new colleagues."
I have been saying that Niccolau blew it. Any quote from the ruling, I've read. I don't agree with it, nor the logic behind it. It is the equivalent of merging Delta with Allegiant when Delta was in BK, and now Delta is posting 800 million a quarter profit. Give me a break. USAir management, like all of the other well paying airline managements, used the BK process after 911 to attempt to permanently reset the wages which has been attained during the good times. They all have furloughs, and have all been "days" away from closing their doors.
So you can believe DOH is the only fair way to integrate but the people who actually get to make that decision are more interested in fairness than you are.
I have no doubt that the guy was interested in fairness. At the same time, he blew it. Think of all the seniority mergers which have occurred under the RLA act. Now consider that this one wasn't consummated and name me another. You are telling me that this is because the USAir guys are just bigger a**holes than
EVERY other pilot group on the south end of a SLI? Or could it be that the NIC was just
that egregious of an award. Enev better is to look at the actions of ALPA, and the people in control of ALPA since this SLI to change ALPA merger policy. It's all there for those to see, who can truly look with the objective eye
I am not married to DOH, just show me another way that is objective. Even more importantly, integrate the lists any way you want, but protect flying of each former group. This is perhaps an even greater travesty of the NIC. While you all applaud the AWA pilots and castigate the USAir pilots, you are punishing and rewarding the children while ignoring the underlying problem--like most failed parents.
As I said, you are not going to change my mind, and I no doubt will not change yours. If you are indeed former TWA, I find it distasteful that you seem to have forgotten what it was like when the AA pilots swooped in to feed on a carcass. Now you want to do the same? Payback I guess? You have now hitched you horse to the AWA wagon and need that success on the backs of the USAir pilots?