How can the company afford those things if we lost money last year? I am curious about that..
Thanks
Here is Council 170's answer to your question.
Special Early Edition of Your EWR Council 170 Weekly BlastMail for Tuesday, March 31,
on course from failure to success
[FONT="]the council 170 weekly update[/FONT]
[FONT="]“Continental feels that there is no contractual reason to pay the lump sum.”[/FONT][FONT="] – Fred Abbott, Vice President of Flight Operations, March 16, 2009, during a pilot meeting in Guam.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Today is Tuesday, March 31st. As some of you may know, Unit 1, the bargaining unit for many of ALPA’s staffers, faces a possible strike tonight at midnight. The Officers of Council 170 fully support our brothers and sisters of Unit 1 in their efforts to bargain for a fair and equitable contract. We will not perform struck work of any kind nor will we be able to access many of ALPA’s services if Unit 1 is forced to go on strike tonight or at any time prior to agreement on a new contract. We have issued this week’s BlastMail early to avoid any interruption in our communications to you, our constituents.[/FONT]
[FONT="]There are
10 items for discussion:[/FONT]
[FONT="]Item 1: [/FONT][FONT="]Mr. Kellner’s Flights of Fancy[/FONT]
[FONT="]In
“The Gift That Keeps on Giving” department, rarely is one story so generous as to provide us with material for multiple BlastMails. Thus, we are thankful for Mr. Kellner’s interesting and enlightening feature article in a recent issue of the Houston Chronicle. In this article, Mr. Kellner tells us all that “now might not be the best time for negotiations with mechanics and pilots”. History demonstrates that the only time best for management to negotiate with us in a fair and equitable manner is
“never”. [/FONT]
[FONT="]The article goes on to say that that, “Continental’s labor costs are on the high end of the industry, in part because of a rash of bankruptcies earlier this decade that allowed some rivals to slash pensions and other employee commitments.” Yes, that’s what the article says. They almost make it sound like fun, all that slashing of “pensions and other employee commitments”. After reading Mr. Kellner’s assurances that our contract is, indeed, at the pinnacle of the airline industry, we are relieved to know that all the things we thought had been taken from us via Contract ’02 are still in place—like our pensions, work rules, and pay. Maybe all we need to do is file a pay claim.[/FONT]
[FONT="]To analyze Mr. Kellner’s assertion that our “labor costs are on the high end of the industry”, we turned to our resident airline analyst, former member of our Negotiating Committee, and Chairman of our council’s Education Committee, Captain Tim Boyens. Captain Boyens is well-known among our pilots for his insight and intellectual vigor and honesty. His take?[/FONT]
[FONT="]Continental Airlines pilots rank eighth (8th) in cockpit costs, and $234 per block hour
lower than the pilots of American Airlines.[/FONT]
[FONT="]The list below, from last week’s MEC Chairman’s Update, bears repeating. It shows all U.S.-based airlines ranked from highest to lowest block hour cockpit costs in 2007, the last year for which this data is available. The list does
not include UPS or FedEx; if it did, we would rank tenth lowest (10th) instead of eighth (8th) lowest.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Total Cockpit Cost per Block Hour - ALL AIRCRAFT 2007[/FONT]
[FONT="]American $781/hour[/FONT]
[FONT="]Northwest $648/hour (via BK court)[/FONT]
[FONT="]Hawaiian $627/hour[/FONT]
[FONT="]Alaska $621/hour[/FONT]
[FONT="]United $613/hour (via BK court)[/FONT]
[FONT="]Southwest $567/hour[/FONT]
[FONT="]Delta $562/hour (via BK court)[/FONT]
[FONT="]Continental $547/hour[/FONT]
[FONT="]USAirways $520/hour (via BK court twice)[/FONT]
[FONT="]Vice President of Flight Operations, Fred Abbott, on his recent fishing trip to Guam, told our Guam-based pilots that we will be spending freely on things such as lie-flat seats for our 777 and 757’s, and satellite TV systems for our 757-300’s and 737 NG’s. While we are naturally thrilled that management has committed millions of dollars to the improvement of our product, they had better be thinking about how to improve the lives and livelihoods of the
pilots who safely, efficiently, and economically
provide our product to our passengers.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Delta Air Lines Captain Mike Donatelli, our ALPA National SPSC Chairman, said it best: “The price of fuel is the price of fuel and the price of a pilot is the price of a pilot.” Our management never wants for a thing, and cost never seems to be an object when it comes to new terminals, new President’s Clubs, new ramp equipment, new airplanes, or Mr. Kellner’s latest compensation demands. We, the pilots, demand the same consideration as every other essential component of Continental Airlines. When fuel was $4 per gallon, management paid it. The price of pilots will be going up significantly, too, and we will require management to figure out how to pay us. Management has gotten industry-leading contracts for years—and ours is now due. Management can use their talents to provide us with an industry-leading contact—or they can fight us and stall. In the end, we will be paid what we have both earned and deserve. How much pain management is willing to go through in the process—that is up to them.[/FONT]
[FONT="]Item 2:[/FONT][FONT="] Fred Goes Fishing[/FONT]
[FONT="]As alluded to above, Vice President of Flight Operations, Fred Abbott, recently hosted all of management’s Chief Pilots on a long-range navigation junket to Guam. At the Guam-based pilot’s meeting called for the occasion, Mr. Abbott told the thirty or so assembled pilots, “this is not just a fishing trip”, and he was right—it was all that—and so much more. It was the chance for Mr. Abbott to treat every Chief Pilot, members of management staff, and assorted hangers-on to positive-space passes, stay in first-class hotel rooms, and enjoy first-class expense accounts, all while soaking up the sun and enjoying the night-life of Guam. They also likely bounced several our non-revs trying to make the difficult trip from Honolulu to Guam to get to work.[/FONT]
[FONT="]How many of our furloughed pilots could have been brought back in exchange for the money spent on this trip? How many pay claims for ACARS time-shorting could have been reimbursed? How many months of health insurance for new hire pilots might have been paid?[/FONT]
[FONT="]Every day, management throws waste and excess like this in our faces followed by a reminder that they just can’t afford to pay us. Yes, they can—and, yes, they will.[/FONT]
[FONT="]
[/FONT]