you talk about unity and solidarity, yet basically condemn a person for being, in your eyes, senior and making a decision that benefits not only himself but the majority.
That's where we differ in opinion.
You, by that statement, believe the T.A. would have benefited the "majority".
I disagree wholeheartedly, as did the majority of our pilots. So, given that the majority believe this was NOT of benefit to them, how can you say that it "benefits... the majority"??!!
Voting No on a TA for someone that isn't even on the property???WTF are you thinking?
I'm thinking of all our pilots hired after D.O.S. who come here and have an even HARDER time paying their bills. You have to fly with those people; telling them you voted Yes to a pay cut for them their first year is a hell of a way to start a trip.
If WE don't stick up for them, NO ONE WILL!!
First year pay sucks. period no matter where you may work. If a person has an issue with new-hire pay they should not apply to be employed there. When mgmnt has trouble attracting/retaining people that playing field will even out.
You and I both know that will NEVER happen. The playing field won't even out, management will lower hiring requirements first. Lower the PIC turbine down to 500 or even eliminate it completely since they'll be F/O's for 7+ years. Or get rid of the Part 121 requirement and open the field for the thousands of charter guys with Lear / Citation command to jump in.
What you're doing is called "rationalizing" a bad decision. It usually leads to an incident or accident in a cockpit, so why do pilots do it in contract decision?
Honestly, I'm glad to have good conversation with anyone about anything. The thing that really gets me riled up is the rift that people want to create between this or that group. That is not unity or solidarity. A person must realize that in the end the right decision is whats best for you and your family in the long run.
I'm glad to have a discussion with you about it and, like others said, I'm glad you got informed and voted; too many people didn't.
However, I disagree with you that the ONLY thing that delineates a "right" decision is whether it's right for you and your family. That's a very selfish thought and is, in my opinion, a pervasive attitude that's helping spiral this career right down the toilet.
What happens when that shoe is on the other foot and the junior pilots vote you a pay freeze to bolster the F/O rates and keep the reserve rules in place with good Scope language. It's right for them and their families, so that's the right decision for the majority, right?
The argument has to work both ways to be valid.