Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

ALPA and CommutAir

  • Thread starter Thread starter LaxPilot
  • Start date Start date
  • Watchers Watchers 10

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

LaxPilot

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 6, 2002
Posts
46
Just woundering what is going on with ALPA and Commutair. Any one have any news? Hopefully the guys there will get it,... they need it.
 
Last week, we got word that we had better than the 80% of interest cards returned. That means ALPA is going to petition the National Mediation Board for a representation election; I believe the paperwork was filed yesterday.

The review and election process should take about 90 days. Stay tuned!

(And to all those that sent your cards and got yourselves informed, thank you.)
 
This is excellent news for Commutair, and the whole emerging 'continental brand umbrella.'
if only we could get skywest unionized..! ;)
 
Is CAL and CALEX pushing Commutair to organize or do y'all think they'd have done it anyway? The timing of this suggests that this is part of CAL ALPA's agenda.
 
if CA gets ALPA'ized, what will be the biggest changes seen? pay? benefits?

anyone with specifics?
 
CAL and COEX ARE NOT pushing for the union. The pilot group is doing it. The pilot group has tried in the past to unionize under the teamsters, but did not happen. Hopefully this time it will.
 
Rank&File said:
Is CAL and CALEX pushing Commutair to organize or do y'all think they'd have done it anyway? The timing of this suggests that this is part of CAL ALPA's agenda.

No, CAL isn't pushing us to organize. They're assisting us because we asked, but they're most certainly not trying to push us into it. This is an effort by a very dedicated group of CommutAir pilots who want to make this a more secure place to work. We've watched for the past several years as our pay and benefits have stagnated while the rest of the industry has been getting steadily better pay and work rules.

Back when we were rolling in profit sharing checks, our overall pay was very competitive in spite of our low hourly pay. Scheduling was also a whole lot more flexible then than it is now. Further, everyone was leaving in couple of years, so they put up with the crappy work rules. I think that's why the previous organization attempt failed -- things really were pretty good here, which is why there wasn't much of a groundswell of support.

Now, with cruddy commutes after 2/3 of the domiciles closed, trips that start with an unpaid deadhead (to one of those former domiciles, no less!) and a five hour sit to end up getting paid our daily minimum for a 12-hour day, people are realizing things like deadhead pay, trip rigs, and duty rigs don't happen on their own at this company. (Indeed, many who've never had jobs outside CommutAir don't realize concepts like this even exist at other companies!)

They're realizing that our per-diem is substandard, and like our pay, hasn't kept up with inflation. They're realizing that other companies don't pay a fourth-year employee, who was finally offered an upgrade, "first-year captain" pay, as Commutair does. (And now we have second-year employees upgrading, making the same pay as those fourth-year captains.) They're realizing that it's not fair for scheduling to make the more senior people work more hours than the junior people because of a bidding system that doesn't work, but that's exactly what happens here.

They're also realizing that if our company gets bought by a bigger fish, we have no reason to believe we'll get placed anywhere but the bottom of their seniority list (if we're lucky) unless we have a contract to protect us. It happens time and time again. Date-of-hire integration won't happen unless a contract forces it.

It's not a bad place to work, but it could be so much better. I'm very hopeful that we'll get the majority vote we need to start making this a better place to work. It may not happen overnight, and it won't all happen in the first contract to be sure. But until we make this first step, it won't happen at all.

CommutAir Pilots: Vote YES!

(edited for typos)
 
Last edited:
IMHO, for an airline the size of Commutair, ALPA will just take their money.

I hope I am wrong. Good luck guys!
 
I applaude the Commutair pilots and fully support their decision to try to bring ALPA onto their property. The only way that this race to the bottom is going to eventually end is for airlines like Commutair to have the courage to stand up to management and demand the pay and work rules that they rightfully deserve. Now if we can just convince the Skywest pilot group to follow Commutair's lead, then maybe CAL management will finally get the message, that we won't allow a whipsawing of these different pilots groups against each other. Good luck in your organization efforts!
 
B190Captain said:
IMHO, for an airline the size of Commutair, ALPA will just take their money.

I hope I am wrong. Good luck guys!

i hope you're wrong, too. that's a terrible way to look at it.
one thing to remember, the union (be it alpa, teamsters, apa, etc) is not a magical mystical entity that will fix things. it's just a legal means to protect your pilot group from harmful potentialities.
your union is only as good as you make it.. the union is the pilots who make up that body.

nice job, commutair guys/gals! good luck!
 
canadflyau said:
ALPA won't be getting rich off those Commutair dues...... I can assure you of that!

Precisely, so why would Commutair be such a priority to them? Not likely a priority at all I fear.

Best of luck to them and like I said before, I hope I am wrong.
 
I hope you're wrong too.....it's gonna get quite an expense spending approximately $400 /yr for f/o's and $1,000 /yr for capt for a magazine subscription. Especially when you pay dues BEFORE anything is negotiated. Kind of like giving a contractor full payment for a house he's SUPPOSED to build for you.

Plus, how do you negotiate the pay problems with a company that still has yet to make money from mistakes in the past. And, when it does....profit sharing will be back and people will think "Hey, this isn't bad afterall" Can't get money from a place that doesn't have any to begin with.

Good luck guys/gals.
 
How many pilots does Commutair have? And has ALPA said no to other airlines looking for representation in the past? I ask this question with knowledge (or what I've been told) has happend before.

I hope they do represent you:)
 
Why weren't they interested. I would think any airline that wanted to be represented by them, they would jump at the opportunity. Was Lakes to small or something? If they for some reason have explosive growth and aquire jets would ALPA then come to them and beg to represent them. I think ALPA is a great union and I just want to know how they determine who gets in and who has to fend for themselves. And for those who fend for themselves and grow under another union only then to get the attention of ALPA......

:(
 
CWS you pose a great question...

I would have though that ALPA would love to represent Lakes so they could bring up industry average, eliminate the poor/unsafe work rules and bring up the bar at an airline where it is resting on the floor.
 
Rush Rush don't delay !!!!!!!

Like I said many times,

Vote yes without delay, the mainline guys need your $$$ so that they may have their MEC and Board meetings on 200ft yatchs in Miami. That stuff isn't free you know.

Besides DW needs to authorize himself another raise, 400 grand per year just isn't enough money for the position of braindead, blindfolded jacka$$.
 

Latest resources

Back
Top