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After the "foreseeable future" at Colgan

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Because everything that Colgan ALPA would do would have to be approved by ALPA National.

Not true. ALPA national provides help when you need it. It doesn't constantly hover over your MEC and approve/disapprove of the decisions that they make.

What happens when your pilot group negotiates an agreement that the pilot group ratifies, the company agrees to, but it doesn't meet ALPA standards? It doesn't get signed, thats what.

Not true. Do you think that Captain Woerth liked that pathetic NWA concessionary TA? Guess again. The pilots wanted it, though, so he let them have it. You control your own destiny. ALPA just provides the resources to help you.

So basically you can negotiate what you want as long as it is what ALPA national wants.

ALPA doesn't have any set standards for CBAs. ALPA allows each MEC to determine its own priorities. The ALPA attorneys and other staff members are happy to help you out with determing priorities, but they are only there to help if you request it.
 
Rez,
Overall that was a very disappointing rebuttal from you. I think you missed the point entirely or you are getting desperate to defend your position.

Ouch that really doesn't hurt me when you talk like that...

Since you obviously missed the analogy, what I'm talking about is having a third party (ALPA) that is unrelated to either group involved (Colgan pilots or Colgan Air) represent us. I don't feel they have our interest at heart. As far as legal representation, if you need to go to court, hire a lawyer. If you don't need to go to court, do you really need to hire a lawyer? If you don't need surgery, would you still hire a doctor?

Keep up with me ok?

ALPA is not a third party. That is management anti union talk. With over 6000 hours I'd like to think you know better.

What is more representative? A democratic organization who votes policy and leaders (hint for you here: a union), or unilateral control group where you get whatever is given and you are offered no input (hint again: Corp America)

If the Colgan pilot group decided to represent themselves do you really think they would do everything themselves? Don't you think they would hire an attorney or negotiator? Or has ALPA cornered the market on them?

How my friend, HOW! How will the Colgan pilots represent themselves?

And to chose not to be represented is not negating your rights. It is actually another right you have (please read the RLA again). It is part of our freedom to chose representation or not. Are you suggesting that we give up our right to not chose representation?

Choosing not to choose is a right. As I said before, if someone is not trained in law and they [try to] represent themselves in court.. I just don't see how logical or smart that is...

This last one is the best. Are you actually trying to tell me it is my responsibility to join ALPA? lol!!! What if I join AOPA instead? Would that cover my responsibility as a pilot? Do ALPA pilots benefit if we join Teamsters? What about pilots at American, Southwest and UPS? Are they being responsible? Wouldn't Colgan pilots be responsible if we started our own organization?

Are you really this way? Have you been drinking? the pilots of American, SWA and UPS purchase services from ALPA. They have to because they don't have the cost structure and the long term expierence to handle section 6 negotiations.

Any Air Line Pilot has benefited from ALPA and its 76 year history as a safety leader in this industry. Just like every worker takes for granted the 40 hour work week and two day weekend that unions fought for and won.

So yes, maybe you should join the organization that has contributed to your career and the things you don't even know that you take for granted. If you want me to school you on the safety issues alone that ALPA has addressed over 76 years I'll be happy to... BTW ALPA just testified on your behalf and on behalf of the AMR, SWAPA and UPS pilot in Congress.

Yes ALPA is a tade union but it is also a Professional Association.


ALPA is not perfect, but it is better than what you are contributing to this profession as of now. Join up, we'd love to have you...
 
Not true. ALPA national provides help when you need it. It doesn't constantly hover over your MEC and approve/disapprove of the decisions that they make.



Not true. Do you think that Captain Woerth liked that pathetic NWA concessionary TA? Guess again. The pilots wanted it, though, so he let them have it. You control your own destiny. ALPA just provides the resources to help you.



ALPA doesn't have any set standards for CBAs. ALPA allows each MEC to determine its own priorities. The ALPA attorneys and other staff members are happy to help you out with determing priorities, but they are only there to help if you request it.

PCL,
No, ALPA national does not have to hover over every move. BUT, it is true that the president must approve everything (Meetings, Negotiations, CBAs, LOAs, Addendums, etc). Anything that is agreed upon under the name of ALPA must be signed by the president or it does not become effective. That is from the ALPA constitution and bylaws. It does not matter if the MEC approved it, the pilot group ratifies it and the company agrees to it. If ALPA national does not agree, it doesn't get signed.

ARTICLE XVIII - AGREEMENT APPROVAL AND VALIDATION
SECTION 1 - COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
Conference or negotiations shall not be initiated, carried on, or concluded in the name of ALPA by
any member, group, or groups of members thereof to make or establish employment agreements
relating to rates of pay, rules, or other conditions of employment, or any other agreements, contracts,
or documents of a similar or related character, or any other form of agreements, contracts, or
documents without the prior approval of the President. Any and all agreements, contracts, or
documents of any and every character whatsoever shall not become effective, binding or operative
unless and until they bear the signature of the President.

Everyone that is a current ALPA member and everyone that works for any airline that ALPA is trying to organize should read the constitution and bylaws. Go to www.alpa.org on the top of the page click the search button and search constitution. It will give you the link.

OK, the next part brings us back to CCAir. You say CA Woerth didn't like the NW TA, but the pilots wanted it so he signed it. Then why didn't national sign off on CCAir? Didn't thier pilots want it? Does this suggest a bias towards the "majors" or against "regionals"?

ALPA must have some sort of standard or guidelines for CBAs. For a group that has been doing this so long and is the industry leader in negotiating they must have something to work from. I'm sure they are not just haphazardly running into the negotiations. Besides, how else does the president justify not signing any CBA?
 
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Ouch that really doesn't hurt me when you talk like that...



Keep up with me ok?

ALPA is not a third party. That is management anti union talk. With over 6000 hours I'd like to think you know better.

What is more representative? A democratic organization who votes policy and leaders (hint for you here: a union), or unilateral control group where you get whatever is given and you are offered no input (hint again: Corp America)



How my friend, HOW! How will the Colgan pilots represent themselves?



Choosing not to choose is a right. As I said before, if someone is not trained in law and they [try to] represent themselves in court.. I just don't see how logical or smart that is...



Are you really this way? Have you been drinking? the pilots of American, SWA and UPS purchase services from ALPA. They have to because they don't have the cost structure and the long term expierence to handle section 6 negotiations.

Any Air Line Pilot has benefited from ALPA and its 76 year history as a safety leader in this industry. Just like every worker takes for granted the 40 hour work week and two day weekend that unions fought for and won.

So yes, maybe you should join the organization that has contributed to your career and the things you don't even know that you take for granted. If you want me to school you on the safety issues alone that ALPA has addressed over 76 years I'll be happy to... BTW ALPA just testified on your behalf and on behalf of the AMR, SWAPA and UPS pilot in Congress.

Yes ALPA is a tade union but it is also a Professional Association.


ALPA is not perfect, but it is better than what you are contributing to this profession as of now. Join up, we'd love to have you...

Rez,
First, I'm not trying to hurt you. What is the point of that? I'm just trying to be honest. Compared to what you have posted in the past, that post was weak.

Second, I'm trying to keep up, but sometimes it is hard to follow your logic and assumptions. So lets get to your latest rebuttal.

Everything that any ALPA MEC agrees to or negotiates MUST be signed by the president of ALPA national (see my post to PCL_128). In our specific case, what connection does the president have to either the Colgan pilots or Colgan Air? None really, except the president is a pilot and the Colgan pilots are pilots. How is that not a third party? And tell me exactly why this is management anti union talk. Because it doesn't agree with what you believe? I hope there is more to it. And you think I should know better? That's funny! Just because I don't believe everything ALPA (or you) is saying (or selling) doesn't mean I'm the one in the wrong.

Ok, here is one spot where I am having some problems following your logic and assumptions. Are you trying to use emotion to sell your point that ALPA is the choice? Because it has no real bearing on this discussion. We can elect all of the representatives we want (ALPA or not) and it has no bearing on what the company will give the employees. Just because we are organized under the RLA doesn't mean the company has to give us anything. The only thing they have to do is bargain in good faith. I also think you are making assumptions that all companies and corporations don't take input from their employees.

How will Colgan pilots represent themselves? Maybe the same way pilots at American, Southwest and UPS do. Or maybe with a committee like Chicago Express pilots did. Is ALPA the only answer to everything? That raises a red flag with me.

Maybe you didn't read most post thoroughly. I agree, if you have to go to court, hire a lawyer. If you need surgery, go to a surgeon. If you don't need to go to court or have surgery, why would you hire someone to help you with something you don't need. Now more specifically to our discussion, what would the Colgan pilots do to represent themselves. We would hire our own attorney/negotiator. That would be the rational thing to do. Don't you agree?

Now, I was not drinking when I wrote that post. More importantly, what way do you think I am? I was responding to your statement that strongly implied (at least to me) that it is my responsibility to join ALPA. If that is what you are getting at, I believe that is absurd. Why would joining ALPA show responsibility and joining Teamsters or an in-house not be responsible?

Just out of curiosity, I would love to know what "services" that American, Southwest and UPS groups purchase from ALPA. Furthermore, what are you implying with this anyway? Are you saying they would fall apart in negotiations without ALPAs help? Don't you think they would get the info/help/services they need if ALPA didn't help. I believe they would, but they found a way to get the "services" they need and cheaper and easier than doing it themselves. If Colgan had and in-house, would ALPA not help us with the same services (for a price of course)?

I agree that ALPA has done good things (and I'm sure they will continue). But they don't do anything that doesn't benefit their dues paying members. That is where their duty lies. But they have also done things that didn't benefit certain members (like CCAir or Jets for Jobs). If union representation is all that you claim it is, then why is only 12 percent of the workforce union. Why is less than 8 percent of the private sector (thats us) workforce union? Why has union membership steadily declined since 1983.

Thanks for the offer to school me in the safety issues that ALPA has addressed, but I'll pass this time. Its in all of the propaganda that I have received. I'm sure ALPA didn't do that (or testify in my behalf) to benefit me. I'm sure they did it to benefit their members. It just happened to spill over to other pilots. Thanks for doing it, but don't try to tell me you did it for my benefit. Also, if you are going to try and sell others on ALPA, be a little realistic. Admit some errors. It would give ALPA a little credibility.

Yes, ALPA is a union and a professional association. If it were only a professional association I believe you would have more members and a lot more muscle. I know I would most likely join. Maybe you could spin union representation into a separate organization.

I also believe that every airline pilot contributes to this profession. They do it by doing their job safely, legally, efficiently and comfortably. In this regard, the Colgan pilots contribute greatly to their profession. I feel it is very condescending and arrogant for you to say that we don't. On a positive note, I do like the fact that you are saying "maybe" we should join instead of implying that we must join. That will go a long way.
 
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Colgan Pilots with ALPA representation rules the world.

ifly34, where do you want to go after Colgan? 90% chance they will be unionized. Are we that 'better' than everyone else here at Colgan that we don't need ALPA? By the time changes are put in place by management if we DON'T have ALPA we are screwed. It will be to late then.


Oh, by the way with the pay scale and our lack of work rules that guys are willing to work for, we at Colgan, ARE bringing down the rest of the industry. I am guilty of it, we all are, we have to change that.
 
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PCL,
No, ALPA national does not have to hover over every move. BUT, it is true that the president must approve everything (Meetings, Negotiations, CBAs, LOAs, Addendums, etc). Anything that is agreed upon under the name of ALPA must be signed by the president or it does not become effective. That is from the ALPA constitution and bylaws. It does not matter if the MEC approved it, the pilot group ratifies it and the company agrees to it. If ALPA national does not agree, it doesn't get signed.

ARTICLE XVIII - AGREEMENT APPROVAL AND VALIDATION
SECTION 1 - COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
Conference or negotiations shall not be initiated, carried on, or concluded in the name of ALPA by
any member, group, or groups of members thereof to make or establish employment agreements
relating to rates of pay, rules, or other conditions of employment, or any other agreements, contracts,
or documents of a similar or related character, or any other form of agreements, contracts, or
documents without the prior approval of the President. Any and all agreements, contracts, or
documents of any and every character whatsoever shall not become effective, binding or operative
unless and until they bear the signature of the President.

Everyone that is a current ALPA member and everyone that works for any airline that ALPA is trying to organize should read the constitution and bylaws. Go to www.alpa.org on the top of the page click the search button and search constitution. It will give you the link.

I agree. Every member of ALPA and every pilot group that is thinking of joining ALPA should read the Constitution and By-Laws. It always pays to be informed.

Yes, the President must sign every TA that an MEC approves in order for it to become a legally binding CBA. This is done to ensure that ALPA legal has time to verify that the contract complies with the law (no contract is valid unless it is compliant with the law), verify that the contract is not in violation of the Constitution & By-Laws, and make sure that there aren't any serious "loop-holes" that the negotiators and MEC didn't pick up on due to their lack of legal experience. In other words, this clause in the C & BLs is there to provide protection to pilot groups. It is not there to allow the President to lord over the pilots and micromanage their affairs. No President has ever acted in that manner.

OK, the next part brings us back to CCAir. You say CA Woerth didn't like the NW TA, but the pilots wanted it so he signed it. Then why didn't national sign off on CCAir? Didn't thier pilots want it? Does this suggest a bias towards the "majors" or against "regionals"?

Not at all. Captain Woerth didn't sign the CCAir contract because it was in violation of the C & BLs. ALPA's Constitution requires that a company provide proof of financial need before an MEC can give them concessions. The CCAir pilots passed a highly concessionary contract, but CCAir management refused to provide any proof that these concessions were needed. Because of that, Captain Woerth did not sign the contract. He can't approve an agreement that is in violation of the union's own C & BLs.

Besides, your management is trying to spin the CCAir situation to their benefit, and they're way off base. Does your management ever point out that ALPA demanded that all CCAir pilots be integrated into the single Mesa seniority list? Does your management ever mention that all of those CCAir pilots are now holding jet Captain slots at Mesa now? ALPA fought for those pilots, and they're much better off now because of it.

ALPA must have some sort of standard or guidelines for CBAs. For a group that has been doing this so long and is the industry leader in negotiating they must have something to work from. I'm sure they are not just haphazardly running into the negotiations. Besides, how else does the president justify not signing any CBA?

Well, I've already answered your last question. For the rest, NO, ALPA does not have any minimum standards or guidelines for CBAs. ALPA is happy to provide statistical analysis to an MEC to show them what the industry averages are, what the differences in work-rules are from carrier to carrier, etc..., but ALPA has no set minimum standards that a contract must have before being signed. Many pilots have fought for such standards for years, but ALPA has always rejected that philosophy and allowed MECs to set their own priorities and goals. ALPA is very much a "state's rights" organization.
 
How will Colgan pilots represent themselves? Maybe the same way pilots at American, Southwest and UPS do. Or maybe with a committee like Chicago Express pilots did. Is ALPA the only answer to everything? That raises a red flag with me.

It's not the only answer, but it is the best answer. No other organization has the resources or experience in dealing with pilot issues that ALPA has. That's why most of the organizations you list above purchase services from ALPA.

We would hire our own attorney/negotiator. That would be the rational thing to do. Don't you agree?

You could afford to hire a single lawyer who has experience in general labor law. ALPA has a huge team of lawyers, with most of them having an area of expertise that becomes very valuable at times. ALPA's representation department also has a database of arbitration decisions that goes back decades. These cases can be presented to arbitrators and used as precedent to achieve positive results in arbitration hearing for out pilots. This database is not available to anyone outside of ALPA. To put it simply, you just can't go out and "hire" the experience that is available within ALPA.

Why would joining ALPA show responsibility and joining Teamsters or an in-house not be responsible?

Teamsters and in-house unions don't represent pilot issues on Capital Hill. When congress needs to know what air line pilots think, they call Captain Prater. They don't call the IBT, they don't call Captain Hunter at the APA, and they certainly won't call the Colgan Pilot Group Committee. The future of your career is highly dependent on what happens in Washington. Only ALPA carries the weight of this profession to Washington.

Just out of curiosity, I would love to know what "services" that American, Southwest and UPS groups purchase from ALPA.

Economics & Financial Analysis, legal, negotiations training, media relations training, etc... There are dozens of different services that can be purchased. Each independent union negotiates their own service agreement with ALPA based on what they need at the time, and it frequently changes and they have to go back and negotiate for more services. If you think that these independent unions are able to do all of this on their own, then you're dreaming.

Are you saying they would fall apart in negotiations without ALPAs help?

You'd have to ask them. They obviously feel the need to purchase services from ALPA, because I'll tell you, it certainly ain't cheap.

If Colgan had and in-house, would ALPA not help us with the same services (for a price of course)?

You couldn't afford it. The APA, IPA, SWAPA, etc... are huge pilot groups with dues revenues that far eclipse anything that you would ever be able to receive at a small regional like Colgan. They have the money to buy these services. Small pilot groups simply wouldn't be able to afford it. In fact, you'd barely be able to afford hiring a single labor attorney to help with general issues. Ask the Capital Cargo pilots why they joined ALPA recently. They had a small pilot group like yours. They simply weren't able to provide the resources that they needed with their limited dues income, and they make a hell of a lot more money than Colgan pilots do.

But they have also done things that didn't benefit certain members (like CCAir or Jets for Jobs).

CCAir pilots benefited from ALPA representation as I stated in my previous post. Don't believe the management propaganda that Mikey and friends are sending out about CCAir. As for Jet4Jobs, every pilot group that has J4J agreed to it. ALPA never forced any pilot group into the J4J program. In fact, some ALPA groups rejected it. Those pilots looked at the pros and cons and decided that J4J was an overall plus.

If union representation is all that you claim it is, then why is only 12 percent of the workforce union. Why is less than 8 percent of the private sector (thats us) workforce union? Why has union membership steadily declined since 1983.

Because anti-labor lawmakers have systematically beaten down labor for years. We're starting to make some progress on changing that. You can help by joining ALPA and contributing to ALPA-PAC. That's how we can change the labor environment in this country and put some power back in the hands of working families.
 
ifly34-

PCL128 has addressed the issues quite well. In addition, everything that effcts your career is derermined on CapHill. No? Every policy and federal law is made in Washington DC and you and I are obligated to comply with it. Now, do you want laws that favor your career?

WashDC and CapHill are the National scene. It is also the speakerbox for the international scene. I've no idea how much time you've left in this career but if it is 5 or more years then internatinal law and politics is going to determine how much money, time off and work rules govern your career.

Only ALPA and and the IPA are addressing these issues. The SWA pilots are mute as well as the AMR pilots. And these guys are organized. You can image how much input the Skywest, Commutair and Colgan pilots have on these issues that will effect them.

Respectfully, you are a spectator in the stands watching others play with your career.... but you can be a player..... and I think you know how... :)
 
I love Mesa.
 

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