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No merger would have been quite a ride for the CAL side. This sort of bid twice a year for a 5 thousand pilot group? Wow. Who knows now.
Andy said:This bid dies once SLI is complete. If you're in training prior to SLI completion, you will get that seat. If not, you're still in your current seat.
Yeah the cal side got screwed with this merger in my opinion
LOL! The CEO and 95% of senior management are ex-Cons so you're getting screwed by the management CAL brought to the table. The same management that went to Tilton looking for a merge when Tilton was about to do the deed with Parker at Airways.
I think CAL would have done what everyother airline including CAL itself has one and that is cycle. As a 98 hire in the left seat you got there at the right time as I did at UAL in 91. We were not smart we were lucky. Hopefully we will all continue to move up.
As for twice a year it will be interesting to see how this is handled moving forward. During times of upward movement United put out bids monthly.
From my perspective, I think CAL learned things in their two BKs that UAL has not. Now that I spend time in UAL hubs and see the operation up close, I don't see a lot to be enthused about.
And I agree that things cycle. In fact, that's what I'm pointing out in this last bid from the CAL side. This is what the CAL cycle looked like since those BKs, and it's going to be brought to an unfortunate end.
OK you can have your opinion. I'd take ORD over IAH any day. NRT over GUM any day, SFO over EWR any day. So where does this get us ....no where. WE now have all of those hubs so press on. We have the same reaction you are having at CO hubs. I laugh every time I park in EWR or IAH as the first guide man signal is opposite of what I know they want. (outsourced ramp, you get what you pay for) These are just differences in the way we operate that we are not used to....that's it. CO and UA have not stayed in business this long because they were clueless. Both side know the basics.
As for your second paragragh, it's not a cycle till you hit the other end. Just ask the SW fellas.
Exactly. Please tell me you're on the SLI committee.There's all sorts of new stuff in this merger, IF you are L-UAL. There is no future meaningful career expectation that a CAL pilot would not have had, or had sooner, absent this merger.
Only somewhat correct. smisek was put in place because Continental's larry kellner didn't want anything to do with United after he took a good look at the full disclosure. It's starting to look like Larry was right, and that we are not going to get another good CEO for a very long time.
That didn't last long. Market cap = price/share x shares outstanding. Using today's closing prices:
CAL= $16.04 x 98.00M = $1.57B
UAUA = $13.95 x 118.99M = $1.66B
Does this mean that, as of today, UAUA is back in the driver's seat? Market cap is not a measure of who's in charge of a merger.
You're also ignoring the fact that due to the DAL/NWA merger, CAL is going to be effectively frozen out of SkyTeam. In order for them to continue to expand internationally, they need to join the Star Alliance or One World.
Ask Kellner or any of the rest of CAL senior management how much they're concerned over their future in SkyTeam.
Andy and Mountain Freak have the situation correctly characterized if you ask this CAL pilot. We've got scabs, they've got scabs. We've got a few strikers left and so do they. The rest of us need to keep our heads on straight and this would be a good deal for all of us. However, I think UAL is going to entertain a USAir deal first. JMHO. That ain't going to be good for CAL.
Quasi-legitimate Gordon Bethune stated CAL/UAL was a "checkmate". I'm inclined to believe him on that. I'm afraid that re-regulation and the currently permissive political climate are pressuring our greed wracked leaders into whatever deal they can make to get themselves paid. (of course oil as well) Hence UAL/LCC. If we want govt to step in [re-reg] we need our union leader to start moving that direction. Prater needs to start talking fuel price rationing for airlines and to also point out that the FAA can't oversee airlines the size they are now, and that they are less equal to the task when airlines are larger. (I personally don't believe that, but it's a good talking point) Here's what I think is going to happen after the May ALPA Exec Board meeting: Prater changes his tune or he's out. JMHO.