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Buffett Bites Back at NetJets Pilot Complaints

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Like I said, it's a matter of perspective. What you don't understand is, it's not apples and oranges. The pilots at NJA fly in the same environment at the guys at Delta. When our engines stop turning, we have the same problem a Delta crew has. We use the same airports, the same runways, the same approaches, etc... Yet we are expected to earn 60% of their wages? Why? Because NJA pilots fly a Citation where a Delta pilot flies a Boeing? A plane is a plane is a plane. You pull back, they go up. You push forward, they go down. "Well a Boeing carries more people." So what? Do you think if there's 1 soul or 200 souls on board the people in the back trust in their crew less? No! NJA pilots have EARNED the trust the passengers place in us. We're good at what we do. Very good. And we are now demanding to be compensated accordingly.

When I stated that NJA is the industry I was referring to the foolish wages the NBAA says we should be making because that is the company's perspective. If they want to use that, FINE. If that's the case, the NBAA will have to formulate some new tables, because we are about to redifine them. We saw it in '05 when after the CBA was signed, the rest of the frax all got a hefty raise. Why? Because WE decide what it is. Not some arbitrary orginazation.

Now, I'd like for you to tell me why I'm worth only 60% of a pilot who works at Delta. Good luck.

The guy in the back of our plane, owns the airline
 
Replaced with pilots on first year pay.

I wonder where the trade off between training costs and lower salary is....?

Better go back to the union boards and our seniority list. The numbers for the past month show a net LOSS of 12 pilots. Regardless of how many they hire, "hired" does not equate to "trained and released to fly the line". And if attrition picks up even a little bit, they're really screwed. It's going to be a very, uh, "interesting" busy season if the trend continues.
 
Replaced with pilots on first year pay.

I wonder where the trade off between training costs and lower salary is....?

I wonder where the tipping point is? There comes a point where you can't meet flight demand because the training pipeline can't keep up with attrition. Replacing 26 pilots = 100 + interviews x 26 initial courses + new hire company orientation + IOE delays + IOE training = what about four to five months to get a qualified crew member online ?

Oh shizzle:

Five months X 26 pilots just quit again = we can no longer meet our flight obligations.
 
They already cannot hire and train faster than current attrition that is definitely on the rise. I believe we lost 13 pilots who were not furloughees who didn't come back last month. Last year we lost over 90 pilots. This year is accelerating faster. I won't be surprised to see 150 to 200 leave not including the furloughees who didn't come back. No way will they be able to hire and train enough this year to keep up with attrition. I'm kind of worried they will finally see the writing on the wall and offer fairly meager improvements across the board and the lemmings will jump on it when we could have extracted much more.
 
With the business model, there's no way an hourly structure would work. Sorry, but before I address any of your queries, you have to address mine. I'd like to know why I'm worth less than 60% a Delta pilot.

Why are you worth less than a JiffyLube manager who makes $150K?
 
In the immortal words of Richard Santulli, " You could of had more... "

Don't settle for small increases. This has gone too far for that.
 
So we should follow all the other lemmings??? The job I had prior to Netjets had us pay a portion of the insurance bill. Funny, every year that bill went up about 25%, and yet I couldn't even get a COLA raise from the crying poor company. I prefer the status quo on insurance. I would rather see parked airplanes than give on this issue. I would also expect a huge raise, more vacation time, and limits on duty days. Your line about auto unions and bankruptcy is nothing but a crock of sh$t. I don't put bolts on a tire all day long, day after day. I fly airplanes. It is a highly technical skill that takes decades and huge amounts of cash to get to the level of competency that Netjets and it's clients demand.

You do realize "parked airplanes" means furloughed pilots, right?
 
FG...time to research what the company is telling you. The reality is we won't now or ever trigger additional taxes to the company's although they have been feeding you that for two years now, and it's the pilots fault.

Secondly, if you don't think we already subsidize the company's healthcare plane, then you should pay me the over $10,000 I've paid out of pocket the past 5 years. You do know the company is "self insured" correct? So in essence I've paid the company and for my "insurance" that $10k.

Third, my fight isn't in large part about money, mine is about the QOL that has diminished since the advent of computerized scheduling, computerized booking of hotels, and computerized triggering of intimidating pilot "firing squads"!!!!

Lastly we hear that pilots are now shadowing floor people in CMH. I'd love for you to shadow us sometime. My guess,mis you couldn't take it very long before you started crying uncle!

Pisses me off when people call BS on pilots from a cozy desk in a temperature controlled environment, eating the meal of their choosing, at a time of their choosing, while I'm up to my ass in snow, in Thunder Bay with ramp temps at -40 C, at 3am having gone to bed at 6pm, all while trying to find my sixth PB and J for the week. And in case you forgotten, I do that daily over 180 days a year....you're welcome for me generating enough profits for you to have a great job and life.

Gosh. I never realized how heroic we pilots are...
 
That can cut both ways....if Hansell's mission is to get rid of all the unions at NetJets, management will be pushing to be released to "self help" where a non-negotiated contract will be presented to those pilots who wish to continue to work, the rest of us will be locked out.

If that's Hansell's plan, I suspect there is also a plan to keep NetJets going while our replacements are hired and trained.

It could get real ugly, real fast.

Not enough pilots available for that to happen, hopefully.
 

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