General Lee said:
Strega7,
Ah, so you did see that.....I would like to forget that, and it really doesn't even hurt me whatsoever, but it will hurt my friends still at regionals. That decision really affected the whole regional industry. It was HUGE.
[emphasis supplied]
General,
You're dead right on that one. Glad you have the courage to tell it like it is.
originally posted by reno....We gave management a temporary bone. We'll see in the next few months what they give back. In the mean time we still kept 100% of our pay and we secured a deal with UAL while our current pay is higher than our competitors and will be even better before '05.
I guess time will tell.
You're right, time will tell. It will tell that you didn't "give them a bone", what you really did was let them take you to the cleaners.
You seem to think that you "secured a deal with UAL" because of what you did to yourselves and to the rest of us.
The truth is you did not secure anything except lower wages for yourselves, and opened the door to the concept of "bidding for growth". Your actions led the way, forced AirWiskey to take a hit on their contract, and caused ACA do essentially they same (it was their management that saved them by saying no to UAL). You started the "low bid process" on carriers like Comair, put pressure on the Horizon contract, undercut the ASA, Mesaba and XJT negotiations, helped CHQ to take less than they might otherwise have been able to get, etc., etc., ..... all with the idea that you could "get something" that your management obviously already had ... a deal with UAL. [Maybe you didn't notice how long (after your decision) it took them to announce the "success" generated by your "vote". [The miraculous hour or two.] You can believe all the fiction you want to, but the actual events are there for all to see.... you paid for something they already had, and you hurt ALL the rest by doing it.
I won't be surprised if you rejoice again should you wind up getting the 700's from CMR and ASA, or forcing them to accept your low ball bid in an effort to keep their equipment.
The General is right.
originally posted by The GeneralYes you did--because you were one of the first to say, "Hey, we'll take expansion over pay." After your agreement, others followed or will follow, and the next thing you know your managment will NOT be able to give you that raise because it will not allow them to be competitive. >>>>>> you will get that much needed expansion, and everyone else will pay for it because you were the ones to start it. You should have atleast gotten some sort of raise for that 70 seater---even $5 an hour more..
The General is right again, Reno. You believe you will get better 70-seat rates in 18 months. Sure, by the time everyone else has been forced to "match" what you "achieved", you will learn the fiction of your 18-month dream. By the way, I believe the moon is made of green cheese too.
What you're far more likely to "get" is the lower 50-seat rates the others all may have to "negotiate" (with few exceptions) by then. Then you'll be able to claim that you got a "raise" for the 700s, because they pay more than the 50's (and less than everyone else got
before your "deal".
Like it or not,
reality is that your actions as a group substantially lowered the bar for everyone operating small jets with 70-seats and gave birth to the concept of "bidding for growth". The trickle-down effects are still coming.
What's ironic is that Mesa gets all of the flack. The truth is that while the Mesa agreement makes no one proud, they at least have the excuse of being under intense pressure from an alter ego. You were not under any "pressure" at all, you just let your beloved management pull the wool over your eyes. Too bad we can't both be the "fly on the wall" at their private cocktail parties.
If you could just say that you did what you felt was in your best interest and you didn't consider or care how it would affect others, I could maybe deal with that. Pretending that you didn't hurt anyone and you didn't take, in effect, a pay cut, is just plain baloney and it sticks in the craw.
Like you said Reno, time will tell. Meanwhile this pilot has no empathy with your groups' position and nothing to thank you for.