JoeMerchant
ASA pilot
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2005
- Posts
- 6,353
No, democracy worked perfectly in this case. Democracy created the C & BLs, and democracy can change them. The CCAir MEC easily could have requested a special vote by the BOD to change the ALPA policy on concessionary bargaining. Instead, they intentionally violated ALPA policy and attempted to force through a contract that they knew to be in violation. That's not a failure of democracy, that's a failure of their own leadership. The CCAir case was a textbook example of democracy and a system of governance. You many not like the democratically created rules of governance, but they are the rules.
Doesn't alter the fact that a majority of pilots wishes were disregarded for the sake of the majority.....
Either don't sign concessionary agreements that affect all of regardless of the effect on others, or sign them all..... I doubt the CCAir issue would have gone the same way if it had been a large dues paying pilot group..... They were easy to sacrifice......
.....again.....selective democracy......
.....by the way, the CCAir leadership was better than the Mesa leadership..... but AH had the kneepads.....