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The Kalitta guys are Teamsters.Rez: Your post is bunk. There is a large disparity between what different ALPA groups are paid to fly similar equipment.....The Kalitta guys are ALPA and they fly the B747 for $50/hour less than the UAL guys.
Merry Christmas to you as well.
A350
The only reason why that might appear that way to the casual observer is that you were seeing the union carriers come to the reality that the JetBlue's, AirTran's, and Frontier's of the world made come true. As I've repeated many, many times over, I feel that the LCC's of the late 90's and early 00's reached critical mass, using their cheap airline labor to majorly undercut the legacies of the time.
ualdriver
Funny how you forget to mention the "mother" of all LCCs.... Southwest... oh... that wouldn't fit in with your "cheap labor" argument. You would have to consider the legacy's failed business plans, crummy customer service, greedy labor and inept management.
skywest has no union, they have a group of pilots that talk to management about issues but they are not a union. at JB there is a similar paper tiger called the pvgc.
JBPA is a union like SWPA,IPA,APA or NPA. ..
Remember Bayou you in your cushy top 400 seniority with your" i got mine" nice 150K plus salary are the minority at jb.. There are another near 1600 here that want thing better for the majority.
ualdriver:
Your opinion, while cogent, ignores the marketplace.
If JB was the onus for $120/hour Bus Captains worldwide, then why isn't your management wanting $65/hour Bus Captains like Skybus? Why didn't your management demand pay parity with MaxJet on the B767?
The marketplace determines who survives and who doesn't. While employee costs are part of the equation, so are business dynamics. JB is a mostly leisure carrier. Most legacy carriers are not. Legacy management and ALPA continue to try to make the LCC's/non-union carriers the scapegoat on why they had to desecrate the pay and working conditions of their employees.
Why, in the world of $80/bbl oil are the legacy carriers pretty profitable and JB is less profitable than when it started? Market dynamics. The legacy carriers went on a binge farming out their flying to lower total cost regionals who were ALPA represented. That made for a glut of unemployed, very qualified pilots. Too many pilots fighting for the precious few jobs causes downward pressure on wages. Right now, we are seeing the opposite (until the 65 thing) and what little upward wage pressure we had is probably gone.
A couple of final points. There is no way a 25 airplane airline has the power to bring the industry to its knees unless that is what the industry managers want to have happen. (9/11 certainly helped this along as well).
During my tenure at USAir, our ALPA leadership took the SWA contract and laid it at the feet of management and said....here.....we will sign it now. (not the SWA contract they have now) They refused. They refused because they knew two things. Pilots eat their young and there would be a lot of low hanging fruit (like the pensions) and they couldn't manage a one person fruit stand.
The ideal of the last contract +1% in the ALPA negotiating world is a thing for textbooks. It doesn't exist. The closest we came to it was in the late 90's when the dot com boom was in full swing and the fares paid by the average businessman were sky high. With the internet, I doubt we will ever see that again.
Rez: Your post is bunk. There is a large disparity between what different ALPA groups are paid to fly similar equipment.....The Kalitta guys are ALPA and they fly the B747 for $50/hour less than the UAL guys.
Merry Christmas to you as well.
A350
BTW....you think you got your a$$ handed to you? You took a paycut and lost your pension. I lost my job, lost my pension, and had to start over again. You can whine about what happened to you till your blue in the face (no pun intended).....but the airlines you complain the most about became havens for the guys that were cut off the bottom of the lists of all those legacy carriers. I for one am glad they were there to catch all the good pilots who found themselves on the outside looking in for no good reason other than when they were hired.
A350
AND BACK ON THE THREAD"
JAN 14TH MEETING. ORGANIZATION UNDERWAY
www.jetbluepilots.org
JPBA
JetBlue pilots association
register, join, be part of the process, it's our company and our union.
Well said Blue Bayou and A350,
I agree 100 %. Were not ready for a union, maybe a few years down the road, but for now... I will never vote for one. I been in a house union and ALPA, and neither were worth a sh$t....
What happens if Delta comes with ALPA=bottom of the list??? It an option Delta is looking at !!!
you spent paragraph after paragraph trying to convince me...that airlines like JetBlue had NOTHING to do with the collapse of wages, work rules, and retirement at the legacy carriers.
At the end I asked you a simple question: If you don't feel that airlines such as JetBlue, AirTran, and Frontier and their ultra low wages and wages that were 50% less than the going rate as they existed in the early 00's, were largely responsible for the decline of pay, work rules, and retirement of the typical airline pilot, then why are you worried about cabotage?
And frankly, when I skim what you write, and you're trying to justify your PATHETIC E190 100 seat 737/DC9 by comparing your E190 rates to an outsourced 50 or 70 seat RJ rate ("and planes extremely close to its size" UFB), I see that you are still lost, and we will never agree.
Did JetBlue (and the infamous "JetBlues of the world") have anything to do with the wages you ended up getting? Sure. However, so did all the airlines that took cuts,
Totally, totally disagree. I was there when my management insisted that UAL was the legacy that had the greatest amount of LCC exposure in the early 00's, and they DEFINITELY were not concerned about the pilot pay, work rules, and retirement packages at DAL, AMR, and CAL. They weren't the ones using dicount labor to undercut us. Managment, however, was very concerned about JetBlue's, Airtran's, SWA's, and Frontier's. And looking at the public numbers that were available at the time, I could see why. We were being massively undercut, and the LCC labor forces were subsidizing it!
However, if you add up every single LCC at the time, the ASM's in their entirety were microscopic compared to the footprints of the legacy airlines and that's my point.
My point is that you don't have to match a legacy's ASM's mile for mile to have an effect. To argue that the JetBlue's, Airtran's, and Frontier's of the were only a certain percentage of the ASM's flown by the big legacies and therefore they had little to no effect on trashing yields in overlapping markets is ridiculous. Using that logic, I guess UAL shouldn't be concerned at all about Virgin's growth in SFO. I mean, c'mon! Virgin's ASM's are only a fraction of UAL's! What damage could Virgin possibly do with their $95/hr A320 Captains, right? I would LOVE to have this conversation again if Virgin sets up shop in JFK. No worries for JetBlue management there since Virgin would be so much smaller than JetBlue operation in JFK! Your implication that an airline needs a matching ASM for ASM presence is just plain wrong, and in my opinion taints many of the other arguments made in your post.
We all talk tough about "full pay til the last day" or "not one nickle, not one job" because talk is cheap, and while we as a profession can and do from time to time make our airlines bleed as punishment for being treated unfairly, when we are actually faced with a choice of liquidation or concessions, we as a profession almost always choose concessions.
The only guys that talk tough are the guys that don't understand what unionism can and cannot do concerning pilot wage, work rules, and retirement and the reality of business. You've never seen me type those words (full pay....last day).
Now as to why I worry about Cabotage......
I'm more concerned about third world pilots coming flying aircraft within my country for third world wages. But I guess as long as these airlines don't get as big (ASM-wise) as all of us, we have nothing to worry about!
And once again regarding the 190. You can not claim the 190 is a 737 but say the 170/175/CRJ700/CRJ705/CRJ900/CRJ1000 is "just an RJ".
I never said any of the aircraft you mentioned above was "just an RJ." I have no idea what you're talking about.
The E190 that JetBlue flies is a 100 seat 737/DC-9 sized aircraft- not an "RJ" sized aircraft. Yet the payscale that your management assigned to your 100 seat aircraft resmembled 50 seat RJ pay. It was around 70 bucks an hour initially, was it not? So basically JetBlue, yet again, was massively undercutting the prevailing wages that existed at that time for no other reason than they could and there was nothing the JetBlue pilot group could do about it.
But OK, you argue that the E190 has a seating capacity slightly less than the average 737 and probably something resembling DC-9 seating capacity. So the E190 rates should have been something slightly less than whatever 737/DC9 guys were earning, but certainly not 70 bucks an hour!!! I find it amazing that you are rationalizing that JetBlue's current E190 rates were/are a fair rate considering the seating capacity of this aircraft compared to similarly sized aircraft at other major airlines.
Further more, the cancerous proliferation of jets larger than 50 seats was 100% the fault of legacy pilot groups and no one else,
OK true. Where did I state JetBlue was responsible for 50 seat RJ's?
You can't give your management the right to outsource the 170 (and bigger)
UAL management doesn't have the right to outsource anything bigger than the E170. And they're limited to 70 seats. And the sideletter that allowed the E170 in particular was a tactical error on our union leadership's part that may be reversible in '09.
LET'S KEEP THIS TREAD ON TARGET,
let's not bring Alp into this.
www.jetbluepilots.org it is the JBPA web site, ( jetblue pilots association) register, the meeting is on jan 14, be there, do not be intimidated .