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AA to buy a Regional

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Those Jetblue pilots all have an expiration date on them. They all work under contracts that are up for renewal someday.
FWIW, eventual contract renewal is not even the limiting factor for JetBlue pilots.

Their individual contracts have an "out" clause for the company that only guarantees one year of pilot employment in the event of merger or buyout.
 
FWIW, eventual contract renewal is not even the limiting factor for JetBlue pilots.

Their individual contracts have an "out" clause for the company that only guarantees one year of pilot employment in the event of merger or buyout.

My point being B6 pilots are easily disposable.
 
AMR to buy Jetblue.
Scraps the Airbus as the airplane comes up for service checks. At the same time does not renew crew contracts as the airframes start to disappear. Jetblue pilots hit the street.

Keeps the Ejet/jblu certif making it their next wholly owned.

The big ??? Who flies the Ejet? Answer; AA furloughees after a lengthy battle of scope and who has bigger balls.

Those Jetblue pilots all have an expiration date on them. They all work under contracts that are up for renewal someday.

Delusional. Even assuming that AA could get the money, why would anyone loan money to them so they buy a very expensive Jetblue, then scrap most of it . . . to get a few crappy little Ejets?? The value at Jetblue is the A320s, not a few Ejets. AA could buy Ejets right now if they wanted and could probably cut a deal for payrates at AA and get some furloughees back to work. But AA hasn't, probably doesn't want it, and probably won't. They haven't even mentioned in negotiations wanting anything more than to replace 50 seaters with 70 seaters at AE. AE is their primary problem. AE is rapidly becoming obsolete with a mostly 50 seat fleet.
 

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