Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Whats up with American? Every other major has not only recalled everyone but has been hiring for a while now. What's taking American so long? Just curious. I'm only a regional FO and don't know much about the majors.
Plunger. Allow me. AMR had the most pilots on furlough (2750.) The big difference is... Every other airline decided to take advantage of recent positive cash flows and grew, added routes, took some new deliveries (except maybe UAL.) AMR has been slowly shrinking since 2001. They have parked or sold aircraft to competitors. They have seen their NYC market share dwindle to DAL and CAL's delight. In short, AMR does not have a long term strategy of growth. They are more concerned with whacking labor upside the head and defending their yearly PUP bonuses - which are based on the stock price, which - SURPRISE! - tends to rise when routes/capacity are cut.
Case in point - AMR is sitting on over $6B in cash. They are either preparing for a pilot strike or a big a$$ merger. But growth is not part of these plans, and that is why we have been so slow in recalling pilots.
Now factor in the 143 early outs (retirements) on Feb 1. These pilots came mostly from 767 and 777 CA bid statuses. They left AA critically short on manning. As a result, AA begins canceling HIGHLY PRESTIGIOUS 767/777 int'l routes - AA's bread and butter! - over the spring and summer months, due to lack of manning. February alone saw a bunch of LHR 777 flights cancelled...
So we have an airline that is not really interested in preserving market share, instead focusing on shrinking, whacking labor and keeping the stock price up. All this while DAL announces something like 10 new int'l routes per month, while taking deliveries of new 777LRs with massive pilot hiring. AA would rather cancel routes/flights and park aircraft. Painful, I tell ya! Now you know why AA pilots have a new motto: "Won't be fooled again!" (The Who) and our new war cry.
73
Well let's just hope none of them curl up in first class for a little cat nap while on duty like one of the recently recalled F/A's did
Not true. TWA never missed a day of operation, and did not go out of business prior to being purchased by AA. While it was an "assett acquisition" negotiated through the bankruptcy process in January-April of 2001, the last flight on the TWA certificate was on August 31, 2004. I know, I was there.Remember that TWA went out of business before AA bought them, so it wasn’t really a merger in the normal sense.
I agree about the picking up open time while furloughed, it is scabbing (in a sense). It happens at many airlines not just AA.
I never thought I would say this, especially being a stapled/furloughed TWA/AA'er but, I feel the APA has done more for it's furloughees than I thought. I figured they would shi+ on the TWA guys and forget about them. I haven't seen it. I may be mistaken but I believe they want longevity for ALL furloughees in this next contract. They could have easily have said all nAAtive furloughees only, but didn't.
I do agree that the APA should put pressure on it's pilots to stop picking up open time during a furlough. However, I bet some of the open time is being picked up in STL as well as other domiciles.
Another reason the AA recalls have taken so long is that AA purchased/merged with TWA right before 9-11. The TWA guys were stapled on the bottom of the seniority list and most got furloughed.
Moreover, furloughed former TWA pilots are coming off the street straight to the left seat of an AA Super 80. This is from a 17 year AA native FO that is still throwing gear.
I’m not trying to drudge up another AA-TWA flight, but just setting the facts straight.
AA767AV8TOR
Big Slick,
I’m not quite sure where you are getting your information, but the TWA pilots were not stapled at the bottom of our list. I routinely fly DFW to HNL, our most senior trip, with former TWA Captains.
Moreover, furloughed former TWA pilots are coming off the street straight to the left seat of an AA Super 80. This is from a 17 year AA native FO that is still throwing gear.
I’m not trying to drudge up another AA-TWA flight, but just setting the facts straight.
AA767AV8TOR
Big Slick,
I’m not quite sure where you are getting your information, but the TWA pilots were not stapled at the bottom of our list. I routinely fly DFW to HNL, our most senior trip, with former TWA Captains.
Moreover, furloughed former TWA pilots are coming off the street straight to the left seat of an AA Super 80. This is from a 17 year AA native FO that is still throwing gear.
I’m not trying to drudge up another AA-TWA flight, but just setting the facts straight.
AA767AV8TOR
Big Slick,
I’m not quite sure where you are getting your information, but the TWA pilots were not stapled at the bottom of our list. I routinely fly DFW to HNL, our most senior trip, with former TWA Captains.
Moreover, furloughed former TWA pilots are coming off the street straight to the left seat of an AA Super 80. This is from a 17 year AA native FO that is still throwing gear.
I’m not trying to drudge up another AA-TWA flight, but just setting the facts straight.
AA767AV8TOR
AAbyDefault;1531223 Hope this clarifies all the misleading info.[/quote said:I dunno.
Something like a hundred years and a billion keystrokes might put a dent in it, though.
Some other items that the garden variety AA pilot absolutely, positively knows to be true about theTWA acquisition--
TWA was bankrupt, on the edge of liquidating, and all TWA employees were just about on the street. Never mind that the bankruptcy filing was a condition of the asset purchase, and that TWA had more cash in the bank at the time of acquisition than they had the previous year, and that the acquisition was the brainchild of our CEO, who was trying to keep his job.
AMR assumed billions in debt when they acquired TWA. Never mind that the bankruptcy process allowed AMR to shed the Karabu agreement, all subordinated debt, and many,many individual liabilities. Equipment lease rates were able to be renegotiated, Worldspan was put up for sale, and AA was able to replace some of their least efficient fleets with newer jets.
Had they not assumed that debt, they would have never lost a dime, never furloughed, and every native FO would now be a captain. Don't bother considering the effect of those two big buildings in NYC falling down and the subsequent economic toilet ride, it's clearly all TWA's fault.
And of course, AA got rid of all the TWA airplanes, and was stuck with the all pilots. Never mind that there are roughly 80 TWA airplanes still flying AMR colors, with only around 400 TWA pilots on the property. And don't ever, ever ask yourself, if you are a native in the bottom third of the seniority list, whether you would have been able to keep working post 9/11 had TWA not been acquired.
And finally, the catch all's. TWA airplanes were all junk, AA had to spend zillions just to get them up to "AA standards", they were all old, clapped out, and hadn't had any mtc done to them in years, since TWA was broke. Yet those very airplanes, most newer that AA's, were the ones that provided just enough cushion for the furloughs to barely touch the native ranks.
I'd say that AMR got value for their money.
And if they didn't, the junior AA pilot sure did.
(This was not posted to reopen the AA/TWA wound. I simply get sick of listening to the half-truths, misconceptions, and outright falsehoods that many continue to spout, and the overarching belief that all the problems at AA are directly the result of the TWA acquisition, that the acquisition directly harmed every AA native, and that the AA pilot group has made tremendous sacrifices because of it.)
I'd say that AMR got value for their money.
And if they didn't, the junior AA pilot sure did.
In my recall class last fall we had several TWA dudes who got MD-80 capts slots, but witheld for 6 months as F/Os on the B-767.
What recall class were you in?
I am going to call BS on this one.
Hmm, guess I was too junior to get value for my money?
Got 4 years on the street instead.
In my recall class last fall we had several TWA dudes who got MD-80 capts slots, but witheld for 6 months as F/Os on the B-767.
Of course TWA would have been around after 9/11 just like the "new" Midway and the pilots would have been much better off if AA had not gotten involved.
The truth comes in many flavors for sure.