That?s something we can?t do. This integration is going to occur. It?s inevitable. How FJ pilots wish to be represented is the question.
Please explain, in detail, how/why integration is inevitable.
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That?s something we can?t do. This integration is going to occur. It?s inevitable. How FJ pilots wish to be represented is the question.
Please explain, in detail, how/why integration is inevitable.
My question still stands, how is it inevitable?
Your answers makes some very big assumptions. You take it for granted that there will even be a vote, it's not a certainty by any means. You then take it a step further that the IBT will win, again it's not even close to a given. Several of the people I know that sent in cards did so hoping for an internal union or ALPA and had no intention of voting for the IBT so cards sent in doesn't equal votes for the IBT.
Even if the IBT is voted in at FJ, does it automatically mean single carrier?
So that leaves the case where the IBT is forced to file for single carrier. In that case, I think it's a long shot that Flex pilots would vote in the IBT.
That's two cases where the outcome is unknown, not inevitable.
You guys are all missing one possible outcome that ken mentioned in his last meeting at Flexjet. Single carrier is determined and the pilot groups votes for IBT, some other union or no union. If no union wins, the FO CBA becomes null and void along with the provision that requires DAC to merge seniority lists. Ken can then decide IF he wants to merge the lists or not, and he said that we are getting far enough down the road that he won't merge the lists. Something about disrupting the business too much.
You guys are all missing one possible outcome that ken mentioned in his last meeting at Flexjet. Single carrier is determined and the pilot groups votes for IBT, some other union or no union. If no union wins, the FO CBA becomes null and void along with the provision that requires DAC to merge seniority lists. Ken can then decide IF he wants to merge the lists or not, and he said that we are getting far enough down the road that he won't merge the lists. Something about disrupting the business too much.
You guys are all missing one possible outcome that ken mentioned in his last meeting at Flexjet. Single carrier is determined and the pilot groups votes for IBT, some other union or no union. If no union wins, the FO CBA becomes null and void along with the provision that requires DAC to merge seniority lists. Ken can then decide IF he wants to merge the lists or not, and he said that we are getting far enough down the road that he won't merge the lists. Something about disrupting the business too much.
OneSky management has one goal in mind: To dupe the pilot group into giving up representation. To that end, they will say anything, no matter how false, to trick the weak and uninformed into voting their way. This is a perfect example.
When single carrier status is determined (and it will be, regardless of the outcome of any representation vote) the lists will be merged, by Federal law.