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USAIR pilots: Time to shut the place down. You can only take so much, so I say to 3100 plus pilot:Its better to die standing up then live on your knees. Their are plenty of jobs around. Virgin, Skybus and lots of carriers overseas are better then what you got
Just do it.
Marty
This issue cannot be solved unless General Lee chimes in.
The fault in your logic is that every integration is different.By the logic of this award, the slotting starts at the 500 and goes down from there.
And for over 50 years there were very few upstarts. Deregulation altered the industry completely. I don't know the exact reason why DOH was removed from ALPA Merger Policy (in the early '90s, I think) but it probably had to do with the fact that DOH may or may not be fair depending on the particular circumstances. DOH would've meant 2/3 of AWA pilots stapled to USA. You're free to believe that's fair but the arbitrator obviously didn't.For over 50 years DOH was the standard ALPA position.
For over 50 years DOH was the standard ALPA position. With provisions and protections for different types of flying, ie wide body international etc.
It was good enough for PI/US and for PSA/US and for Allegheny Mowhak etc etc etc. It was the standard until the junior United pilots got it changed because they were afraid of a merge with US.
IF you take this to it's ridiculous conclusion when this company merges with Virgin, or Skybus or Spirit then all those pilots, some with less than one year seniority, hired as captains off the street, will be senior to most West pilots. Your service time will count for nothing.
You will see more mergers, and you may not like what you get, praticularly as you grow older and spend more time in this industry. Your prior service time has no meaning. If the company merges with some upstart you will get hosed.
A great way to build ALPA unity.
odell got put ahead of colello - thats f'in bullsh1t. east got the shaft big time.
tell me how the fvck does someone that got hired in 2005 get put ahead of someone with an 1986 DOH?
You are exactly right. I wish more people saw it this way. It is a very emotional topic BUT what did east expect? Furloughed pilots brought nothing to the table. As for the last East guy on the list with over 18 yrs on property, did he actually expect to have his RELATIVE position change? Did he expect to come through this with 4 bars on his shoulder? Talk about a windfall! Like it or not it went relative seniority more or less.
I think much of the blame lies with the east merger committee. Not in so much as they didn't try their hardest but in the fact that DOH was a pipe dream from the beginning. The expectations of the East pilots were not managed well and they were led to believe that they could get DOH and capture some of their lost seniority at the expense of a another pilot group who were working for a growing carrier. That was just not going to happen. Someone on the east side should have been preparing the pilot group.
Now I read on the east messsage board of how guys are going to try to shut the company down so the west guys can suffer like they have. And that they should not vote on a new contract no matter what so the company has to operate the two airlines separately. And my favorite, decertify ALPA and reject the Arbitration Award. How short sighted is that? There are not too many jobs that pay 100k to an unemployed pilot that has been an FO all his career. It's time to get over it and move on. We are all lucky to be working.
Why do you need to fly USAir to commute to the 7th grade? Get back to snickering over the word booger on Myspace.I avoid flying USAIR commuting. They are so unreliable. I wonder why pax still fly them. I give 5 years max.
Call me stupid, but I used to fly with the 3100 USAir grampa pilots and I don't see them voting a 15-30% seniority improvement to 1800 HP savior of the world wonder kid pilots, at their own expense.
It is simple math. Grampa pilots are always willing to vote for junior pilots to loose seniority and money in exchange for a payoff to them. And grampa pilots were all too willing to vote 2000 pilots off the bottom of the USAir active list in exchange for a payoff.
In this situation Dave has to convince 3100 pilots (who collectively view themselves as senior) to acquiesce to a seniority loss to 1800 other pilots (that they perceive to be junior). The arbitrator’s ruling doesn’t change the fact that there are 3100 pilots who get to vote on when or if the list is effectively integrated.
To get the grampa pilots to adopt what they perceive as a seniority loss to themselves, it will cost a pay raise that I can't imagine Dave is interested in paying.
But who knows, maybe the grampa pilots have changed in their old age or maybe Dave is really a sugar daddy at heart.
I don't know, but I sure as heell wouldn't buy a ticket to be a customer while this is going on.
So, with the widebodies fenced, will the senior USAirways East pilots be able to bump the AWA 757 pilots off their Hawaiian routes? When will East pilots be able to bid West domiciles like PHX and LAS and vice versa? Watch the older East pilots bid sunny Phoenix (pre-retirement) at the first chance.
I love to hear the East pilots crying about their arbitration result. Perhaps they should consider that they were weeks away from LIQUIDATION and the unemployment line? Does that ring a bell? They should consider themselves lucky in my opinion - especially the top 500...
Call me stupid, but I used to fly with the 3100 USAir grampa pilots and I don't see them voting a 15-30% seniority improvement to 1800 HP savior of the world wonder kid pilots, at their own expense.
It is simple math. Grampa pilots are always willing to vote for junior pilots to loose seniority and money in exchange for a payoff to them. And grampa pilots were all too willing to vote 2000 pilots off the bottom of the USAir active list in exchange for a payoff.
In this situation Dave has to convince 3100 pilots (who collectively view themselves as senior) to acquiesce to a seniority loss to 1800 other pilots (that they perceive to be junior). The arbitrator’s ruling doesn’t change the fact that there are 3100 pilots who get to vote on when or if the list is effectively integrated.
To get the grampa pilots to adopt what they perceive as a seniority loss to themselves, it will cost a pay raise that I can't imagine Dave is interested in paying.
But who knows, maybe the grampa pilots have changed in their old age or maybe Dave is really a sugar daddy at heart.
I don't know, but I sure as heell wouldn't buy a ticket to be a customer while this is going on.
They don't need to "Shut it down". USAirways will fail on it's own in short order. Better get your logbooks and resumes up to date !
Dave? Doug? Whoever.
And why should anyone think that the US East pilots will ever work together for their common good? It's never happened in the past.