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Nope, and no WARN letters sent out.
Don't think they will furlough, reserves are flying up to 98 hours per month..
Nuff said.
Further, any layoffs, along with the high number of early retirements, will exacerbate the probably already violated 7300 AA pilot staffing floor when the APA can force the divestiture of American Eagle.
I thought falling below the 7300 mark meant that:
4. Cockpit Crewmember Floor.
In the event that the number of cockpit crewmembers employed by the
Company on the American Airlines Pilots Seniority List goes below 7300, the
parties agree that the commuter exception contained in this Section D. shall be
terminable at the option of APA following a 90-day period to provide an
opportunity for discussion. If APA elects to require termination of the commuter
exception, the Company shall thereafter have a reasonable time to complete
the disposition of the operations covered by this Section D. during which period
the parties shall meet in good faith and discuss the issues related to such
termination. Pilots added to the American Airlines Pilots Seniority List by way of
seniority merger shall not count in calculating the number of cockpit
crewmembers for purposes of this section 4.
Wouldnt that mean all regional flying regardless of wholly owned or not would be ended? I dont see how divesting Eagle would be a win for APA in regards to this 7300 issue.
Apparently no WARN letters went out, so the Oct 1 furloughs are off the tabvle. I'm not really keeping up with the 7300 number, but it definitely sounds like the APA has the ball in their court. Hopefully, they'll get a few more guys back on property as an outcome.
Could well be a long line of guys walking out the door on 30 Aug.
I think it actually benefits ALL the pilots. In short, a way to keep management from shrinking the airline below 7300.
aa73,
Question is, do we see furloughs first or recalls?
More importantly, when?
I think it actually benefits ALL the pilots. In short, a way to keep management from shrinking the airline below 7300.
The point of the clause was that they couldn't buy another airline to fix their floor problems. So Reno and TWA don't count against the 7300. This is VERY good. It actually motivates the company to recall EVERY TWA pilots and get down to the 500 or so natives that are below TWA, and then hire more off the street.I hear what you're saying but seems like it would have been just as easy to add XX number of pilots to the floor and include all your brothers into the equation thus raising the floor. Guess it's just me.
Gup
Lots of moving parts right now. Factors are the shortage of pilots now, the drawdown of flight/aircraft, and most importantly, the number 30 Aug retirements.