OK, this whole thing has gone south rather quickly, but I'm going to give you a little reality check in the form of a primer on Bond-McCaskill.
1st, there is no "self-help". What are you going to do as an F/O? Call in sick? Stand on the brakes so the CA can't taxi? WTFO? Wow, no kidding. That term was being used in a generic sense. Meaning the world is grey, not black and white like you are stating.
2nd, the General is absolutely correct in using the NWA/DAL merger/acquisition as a baseline for comparison. Why? Because that's what an arbitrator is going to do. In reality, it will probably be Frontier/Republic that will be the baseline for this arbitration.
You have two relatively healthy companies, one "acquires" the other, although they call it a merger (sound familiar?) and they have to integrate seniority lists. You can bet that an arbitrator will look VERY closely at how DAL/NWA was integrated to see how it applies to our scenario.
Hint: I know a little something about arbitrators using past precedent to make decisions.
No, that can't happen. I'll get to that in a sec.
On the contrary, from what I'm hearing, your SWAPA colleagues proposed something quite untenable for the AirTran pilots today. They are hard at work to represent your best interests, as are our representatives from the AirTran ALPA MEC. It's an opening position, and it's negotiations. Like you said before, it's business, not personal, although your vitriolic post makes me suspect it *IS* rather personal for you. By your "I'm all knowing and superior" tone, I can say the same about you. But, I will take it down a notch. It's easy to post when your ticked off. Doesn't change my position though.
July 2011. Yes, that's right, about 10 months from now. Why? That's easy.
Now that truly is funny! Its could take 6 months to iron out the transition agreement with the company. When we finally do start at SLI negotiations you think we will go from start, to completion of Arbitration in FOUR months. Now that is truly interesting. No, impossible.
You cannot force AirTran pilots to work on a B-scale indefinitely. I never said that. I said if QOL is all your truly worried about, a "B" scale solution can probably be worked out in everyones favor. I realize that will never happen, just calling BS on some of the posts written by Airtran guys. You really, really need to go read Bond-McCaskill before you post further on the subject. As a primer I promised earlier in my post, here's the meat and bones of it:
After a few months of negotiations and the parties hit a stalemate, EITHER ONE can go to the NMB and invoke their right to BINDING ARBITRATION. At that point, you have maybe a year,(All of the times keep adding up)I agree, I am trying to make a point that Airtran pilots cannot have it all, they have to give something up if they want any Southwest pilots to buy off on a SLI deal. and a binding arbitration decision gets passed down. I can guarantee you, based on previous decisions, an arbitrator isn't going to let you set up a B-scale for AirTran pilots.
The General was spot-on in his previous post: the AirTran pilots will start enjoying the benefits of the Southwest contract and you could wind up with a MUCH WORSE position in an SLI than negotiating it. I could not agree more. Your Airtran guys are the ones touting pay raise and relative seniority. Your a moderator, go back and read some of the posts on this subject.
None of us want that. We are happy that this is happening, most of us have a lot of friends over there that we are looking forward to working with again. We have been fair with other airlines when we were in the driver's seat, we simply ask that you extend us the same courtesy. That will happen, but you will have to be willing to give some as we give. All these things (pay, qol, schedule, work rules) that you are about to benefit from, we have worked hard to secure over the years. If you think it was easy to do, I ask why we are not taking your pay rates? Whether it's relative seniority or a slotted integration with pay protection and fences, I don't really care. I just want what the majority of AirTran pilots want: a good career with a good income with a stable company and don't hose me.