Maybe I'm missing it, but I can't find any limit to the amount of airport appreciation time they can schedule us for. Combine this with a 13 hour day and we can be assured of plenty of free ready reserve time (on the last day of the trip)
For lineholders, it's in there, but only by merit of the 5 hour hotel clause.
As a lineholder, if your last leg back to domicile from a trip is a deadhead, they can leave you at the outstation for up to 5 hours before your deadhead has to depart. 5:01 and you can make them give you a hotel room for this. 4:59, you're sitting in the terminal in uniform in a chair somewhere. Current book prohibits this by saying they have to put you on the first flight out to return you to base.
As a reserve, they can now sit you for up to 6 hours without a hotel and call it a "ready reserve assignment". There's no requirement for the departing flight to leave from the outstation coming back within that 6 hours either and no hotel provision for the reserve pilot, so they could technically fly you one leg out, sit you for 6 hours, then make you wait another hour or two for the next flight scheduled after your ready reserve sit.
Those are extreme examples using the maximum boundaries (or lack thereof) in the verbiage, but the possibility is there, and if they ever need to use it for operational integrity, you can bet they will.
Senior pilots are NOT exempt from this, as there is NO guarantee they will build pairings with less sit time. In fact, because of the 4.5 Average Day, you can bet that when our peak travel seasons are gone (Fall and Winter), you WILL get
- 3-day trips with 6 hours day 1, a 24-30 hour sit in an outstation hotel, then 6 hours day 3, worth 13.5 hours instead of the 16 we enjoy now.
- airport appreciation on almost every trip which will leave you reassignable.
- deadheads at the end of trips and being left at outstations on the last leg for hours.
This is what happens when productivity goes down... they save money by parking the crews but still leaving them open for utilization. It's happened at EVERY airline that has gone to an average day that's not very high.
I also find it interesting that we compared wages to bankrupt Delta, and they have an average day but it's well over 5 hours. Again, why do we not get "industry average" in some areas, when we're forced to take it as a concession in others?
OK, back to work...
