Lear70
JAFFO
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2003
- Posts
- 7,487
Well, to be clear, the 717's are not coming over to Southwest in 2012. However, with them pulling more 737 PLANES out of AirTran in 2012 and sending them to Southwest than they are pulling PILOTS and sending them to Southwest, SWA pilots will still get upwards of 20 737's (with 2 in progress) by the end of December, 2012, and only 168 AirTran F/O's will transition.Actually, this is somewhat of a surprise and shock to pilots on the Southwest side as well. We too, were expecting the 737s to come over first; in fact I'm almost sure that at one point, I read that the first 717 wasn't transistioning until sometime in 2013. Now it's almost backwards. Everyone over here was anticipating that, because it's the 737 transitions that help SWA guys: Airtran 737 guys coming over with planes trigger upgrades and upward movement for SWA guys. Plus, Airtran-to-737 guys would get under our pay scale sooner. I suppose that's as close to a win-win as possible under our agreement. Not a putdown, but it seems that the transitioning of the 717s first doesn't help the paychecks of either pilot group.
Pulling fewer pilots than planes on a pure staffing ratio basis frees up AirTran pilots to transition to the 717. The plan is to have almost all (if not ALL) of the 717 training events done in 2012. Then, starting in 2013, with the pilots already in position in their final crew positions, the 717's will start coming over.
At that point, it appears that the 737's will stop coming to Southwest, at least at the same pace they were in 2012, and that the international flying will continue to grow at AirTran with those remaining pilots and planes, while the 717's are sent over to Southwest.
You said it. I didn't.In addition to the rumored problems with the new reservation system that Lear reported (slowing 737 transistion to SWA for int'l travel), I wonder if saving money in salary isn't at least partially responsible. Southwest 717s bringing in SWA revenue (while paying Airtran salaries) would seem to help the company's bottom line. Obviously some 737s are coming over in 2012, but not at the speed and ratio that we all thought. Looks like GK is trying to save a buck or two here as well.
Bubba