livin'thesim
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2005
- Posts
- 926
like we have discussed above... it's not black and white... there has to be some one-size-fits-all intermixed with reasonable adjustments for those issues.... but the idea that a 747 captain can make from 260/hr to 84/hr flying cargo depending on who he works for and how long he's been there is ludicrous.
Great point, but if you try to make that enforceable by law, you will not be able to.
You could make it a prerequisite to join ALPA, which would be easier.
But doing this would ensure that companies would fight unionization efforts even more vigorously.
I don't know any corporate pilots who work for minimum wage. The race-to-the-bottom argument, which has some valid points, falls flat if you take it too far.
Similarly, under my proposal, the scenario you propose (a dirtbag airline paying a 747 CA $100/hr) is not likely.
Because they would have to pay ALL captains $100 per hour. There are simply not enough people qualified to do the job who will work at that wage.
Steeply scaled longevity pay allows companies to purchase new labor at below market rates, and trap older employees at higher rates subsidized by the newer labor.
I understand the strong desire you have to "force" companies to pay at a certain rate. But price-fixing pay rates will lead to disaster for some of the reasons I have stated in the above posts.
The correct solution is to design the labor marketplace in such as way that the pay rates rise to the desired level.
YOU WILL NOT be able to stop all carriers from paying a low wage. THERE WILL BE people who undercut other pilots and work for less.
When you push a policy change, you have to understand that you will not get ALL the policies you want. Therefore, you must get the policies you need.
If you expend a ton of negotiating capital on minimum pay rates, you will NOT get the expected result, because companies will create leaks in the system and find work-arounds to ensure that your TOTAL PAY is less.
FMS-speed:
I am going to say, as respectfully as I can, that what you propose is too simplistic a solution and will probably backfire. Once a company cannot pay the rate (or engineers its books to ensure that it cannot) then they will threaten the pilot group with bankruptcy, and run off to BK court to get temporary pay cuts - directly approved from the government. Or, they will get the pilot group to agree to a 50 hour monthly guarantee with no trip protection.
Checkmate, my friend.
Also, you will be creating a public-relations disaster that will make pilot groups look overpaid and greedy (even if it is not true), eroding popular support and risking repeal of the legislation you fought so hard to get.
It is not the government's job to decide what companies can afford to pay. It is not our place to harness the legal system to force our employer to hand over more money. Once a carrier goes under, the news will be filled with interviews with unemployed gate agents and baggage handlers who are now out of work because of those "greedy pilots". Then, the reactionary public will demand that something be done.
But eliminating steep longev scales is an easy sell from a PR standpoint. It can be sold as "fair and equitable".
It requires no legislative force.
This proposal does not force EMPLOYERS to play ball.
It makes OUR OWN PILOTS to change what they demand from an employer.
Many people think that private-sector unionization is a violation of free markets, but this is WRONG. The voluntary organization by employees to bargain collectively is ALSO a free market solution.
Mandating that every airline be union, or making unions illegal would be a non-free market solution.
Mandatory minimum wages is non-free market (if enforced by the government).
Which brings me to my last point, alluded to earlier:
What the government gives, they can take away.
The pilot community needs to redesign the system by which we VOLUNTARILY agree to exchange our labor for money. If we change our system, employers will need to play along.
This requires adult thinking, mature behavior, and above all the ability to educate pilots on the financial literacy aspects of any such proposal. If we cannot manage this among ourselves, then what right do we have to go crying to the government to make our employers get in line with our pay demands? Weak, pu--y move in my view. We should get it on our own or not at all.
Re-design the labor supply model and YOU WILL GET the pay rates you want, and the result will be durable, not just one court's ruling away from losing everything you worked for.
Doctors control the supply aspects of their labor, and they are well paid.
So do lawyers.
So do engineers.
The coming wave of retirements gives pilots a unique opportunity to use that reduced supply of pilot labor to make efforts at changing the system.
Are we mature enough to take this opportunity? I hope so.