4got2flare
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 19, 2006
- Posts
- 79
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.
I thought I heard that SEA is a very senior base at NWA. Most junior person there is a 96 hire from what I have heard (not confirmed).
War Damn Eagle!!!
Lived in ATL for most of my life. Really turned into a turd of a city in the past 10 years..... Love Auburn though! Guess you got to head to the state line......
IMHO Atlanta has developed a good down town area, something it has never had before. In the past Atlanta would have never been a "vacation" city, but the Aquarium area is nice and we see a lot of concerts at Chastain, Lakewood and Piedmont park. Turner Stadium is one of the nation's best. The new Atlantic Station deveopment is a fun place too.Lived in ATL for most of my life. Really turned into a turd of a city in the past 10 years.....
Savannah? an easy drive to the parking lot?War Eagle backacha!
If there is a better place I believe those are cities within two hours of ATL. Such as Birmingham, Auburn (have you seen the stuff down Moores Mill lately?), Chattanooga, and a little further south; Savannah.
Still contemplating a move to one of those. Still an easy drive to the parking lot.
GOD is on reserve in Seattle at NW.
Arbitration's one big advantage is that the MEC is not responsible for their decision - the decision is made elsewhere.
Translation: Unless YOU have been sitting at the negotiating table YOU don't have a CLUE what the NWA reps are or are not doing with respect to their positions/duties. You should head over to Spondivits for a nice warm glass of STFU.
Well I haven't been at the neg table, but I have been informed pretty well at how it all went down.
Here is one for you: since 1986 there have been TWENTY-SIX separate arbitrator's rulings related to the NWA/Republic merger--not one was ever agreed to between the parties! And the NWA guys wear that record like a badge of honor. Talk about dysfunctional. An arbitration should be the exception, but unfortunately in the myopic world of airline pilots it is all too often the rule. We were trying to change the model and bring a big chunk of change and contractual improvements along for the ride...but the NWA guys didn't want that. Nor did we want to "hose" the NWA guys: our position on seniority was very rational and fair--no one got screwed. In fact most of the bitching on the DAL side would be about how WE would get the raw end of the deal. But since the 1986 merger has so permanently gouged the perception of most NWA guys (especially the older ones) no other reality other than hostile and unyielding positions that can only lead to arbitration can ever be envisioned or accepted.
That's too bad. I think this merger could have been a great success where "the whole is greater than the sum of the parts" and would have led to an even better and more prosperous career for both pilot groups. But the NWA merger guys seem to personify the study that found that people would actually rather only be given $500,000 so long as no one else got more, rather than get $1 million when others got $2 million--paranoia at its purest.
But keep telling yourself that turning down an opportunity for significant contractual gains and even enhancing career expectations is somehow a good thing...if you do it long enough you may even start to believe it.
I was bored so I looked this up.
Delta has 2949 retiring in the next 15 years.
I knew the 400 club would fuk this thing up.
Welcome to (or not) dysfunctional Northwest Airlines, where we're not happy until you're not happy!
Word to management. If it still works penny wise fuk the pilot groups.
Do you have to post this on every thread on FI? I think you missed a couple in the MIL area.What I don't get is that you think it is all that big a number. Here are the NWA retirements:
Year- Total/NWA/DAL
2009 - 9 9 0
2010 - 8 8 0
2011 - 15 15 0
2012 - 15 15 0
2013 - 26 24 2
2014 - 220 161 59
2015 - 253 187 66
2016 - 288 203 85
2017 - 338 214 124
2018 - 382 232 150
2019 - 465 259 206
2020 - 547 293 254
2021 - 602 285 317
2022 - 780 327 453
2023 - 830 298 532
2024 - 784 277 507
2025 - 751 257 494
2026 - 654 233 421
2027 - 513 173 340
2028 - 395 154 241
2029 - 326 138 188
Total NWA retirements - 3,762
Total DAL retirements - 4,469
So who has more retirements?
In the next ten years NWA plans to retire 1,068 pilots. Is that half the list?
In the next ten years Delta will retire 468 pilots, true that is half as many, but at year 12 Delta's retirements kick in and continue to exceed the NWA numbers.
15 years post merger:
DAL - 2248
NWA - 2530
But is that the end of the story? No.
How many pilots has Delta hired in 07 and how many are planning to come on board in 08? That number will be around 900 in 14 to 16 months of hiring. Most of these pilots went to widebodies. Which is more important - growth, or waiting for your Captain to expire?
Further, Delta is growing while the NWA fleet is shrinking. The 787's coming in 09 will certainly help, but in the mean time Delta could use pilots off the DC-9 to fly, or back fill for the dual crew 777's.
Until you see the numbers some things are not what they appear. Mutual Funds do this all the time to create great performance numbers.
Here is the project retirements. As you can see when you use 15 years it looks like DAL has alot of retirements, but if you use 12 years the numbers change dramatically. Unless NWA gets credit for its retirements going forward its going to be tough to agree on a SLI.
Data from January 2008 Seniority Lists
Yearly Retirements Date
Total
NWA
Delta
Current List:
01/01/2009 99001/01/2010 88001/01/2011 1515001/01/2012 1515001/01/2013 2624201/01/2014 2081555301/01/2015 2411825901/01/2016 2741957901/01/2017 32121011101/01/2018 35022112901/01/2019 42025017001/01/2020 50128621501/01/2021 56027328701/01/2022 73831242601/01/2023 79228650601/01/2024 72625547101/01/2025 67922945001/01/2026 55520335201/01/2027 362121241