contrail67
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2003
- Posts
- 954
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That is wrong. Call your merger rep and get briefed as to the new policy.
But since UAL pilots do indeed think they get DOH, I wonder how they're feeling now since US is more or less a very senior airline now, isn' it?.
East coast seniority does not worry me. Look how old they are. Most of them would not be players in the end. It's the younger AWA pilots who like to talk about thier relative seniority and have no problem jumping over the older pilots that have more longevity that bother me. As far as I am concerned DOH is still the way to go. So as to answer your question, this UAL pilot still advocates DOH even with the east.
I don't understand the merger with USair. What does USair have in there route structure that is so desirable to United? It's not the USair international flying. How does this improve United?
Their new policy uses longevity/DOH press on with life.
Oh well......at least UAL is now very much in favor of DOH, so the absolutely ill-conceived, irrational, inane NIC will be placed in a coffin like it should have been upon its first viewing.
Once again, the true weakness of ALPA is displayed...the uneducated pilot who only listens to rumor, innuendo, wants to be spoon-fed every tidbit of information on an ongoing basis, jumps to conclusions based on a speed-read interpretation of legal text, and is to f!#$%in' lazy to do some actual research.
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Parker has been with US Airways since June 1995, when he joined as senior vice president and chief financial officer of America West Airlines. He additionally held titles as executive vice president, corporate group, and chief operating officer before being elected chief executive officer and chairman of America West in September 2001. He continued as CEO of US Airways following the merger with America West Airlines in 2005. Under his tenure as CEO, he made an unsuccessful bid to merge US Airways and Delta Air Lines in 2007.
For the fourth time in four years, Doug Parker is actively chasing his dream of a game-changing airline merger..... Parker's chase began in 2004, when America West bid for troubled ATA Airlines. "That was the first indication that Parker was going for market size, trying to break into the Chicago market," says aviation consultant Robert Mann. The effort failed because ATA's aircraft lessors determined they could get more value for their planes from foreign operators than from America West.....
Tilton is controversial for his stance as a major advocate for consolidation in the airline industry. Tilton has stated he believes it is the only way to end commercial aviation's cycles of booms and busts. Since 2006, Tilton has been searching for a merger partner for United Airlines. After failed negotiations with Continental Airlines and US Airways Group, in the summer of 2008, Tilton settled on an agreement with Continental to form a marketing agreement, but not an official merger as he hoped for. The agreement is scheduled to take effect in 2009. Tilton still claims to be open and willing to participate in a merger transaction when the right opportunity arises.
The best thing to do is short either stock today and sell it the next few days
The Nic isn't going away. It will be the seniority list of the US Airways final product. Any airline that merges with US Airways will be merging with the Nic list. If anything, I believe that a merger will accelerate the implimentation of the Nic list.
No court in its right mind will ever throw it out. It would set a terrible precedent and open a huge can of worms.
That is wrong. Call your merger rep and get briefed as to the new policy.
But since UAL pilots do indeed think they get DOH, I wonder how they're feeling now since US is more or less a very senior airline now, isn' it?.
Where do you guys get "UAL pilots think they get DOH"??
I don't know ANY UAL pilots (other than a couple blowhards on this forum) that think DOH is fair, equitable or desirable.
If you think that the majority of UAL pilots would be in lockstep with the Easties, you've been smoking crack.
And you think they, (we) are in favor of putting younger pilots senior to us because of their relative seniority?? Sorry I, and anyone that is thinking, will take the old guys as the senior folks. If you think that is becaus we would be "lockstep with the east" you would have to think again.
Unless ALPA is removed from this property (highly unlikely in my opinion), the ALPA merger policy would be most influential.
DOH is not mentioned.
Your opinion and mine are moot unless the union or the policy changes.
If you read the Nic award, it says it will be the seniority list when a joint contract between US Airways and America West is implemented. If there is a merger with United, there will never be a joint contract between the East and West, thus there will never be a Nic list. The only way it could happen is if first the East and West get a joint contract, and then work on yet another joint contract with United... Not gonna happen that way if this merger turns out to be true...
There would never be a court that would have "throw it out", as it would never exist. The Wake ruling only states that the Nic WILL be used in a joint contract between the East and West. Period. Again, a merger with United would never trigger that...
Actually, the Nicolau award is the integrated LCC seniority list and it's BINDING. There is no other. You are discussing a contractual issue, not a seniority list issue. The contractual issues come and go, but the list survives. If LCC merges with another carrier the only seniority list that can be presented is the Nicolau list. Read the "Award".
"A. The integrated USAirways pilot list shall be the list attached to this award as exhibit A."
The Nicolau award is a fait a compli, a done deal, binding on all involved, no way to get rid of it and of course USAPA must defend it.
However, if there is a dispute over the meaning or interpretation of the award, Nicolau retains jurisdiction and will hear arguments then render his decision.
Heyas,
What does LCC bring to UAL?
Nu
"The problem is not US Airways needs to do a merger," said US Airways Chief Executive Doug Parker, during a post-earnings call in January. "To the contrary, as we just showed with these [fourth-quarter] results, we're doing as well as anybody. The problem is the industry is doing poorly, and the industry does poorly because there's too much fragmentation, and reducing that will create some real value."
United and US Airways represent the country's fourth- and fifth-largest carriers in terms of mainline capacity. Combined they would become the largest, surpassing Delta.
If the new legal company, post-merger, is "United Airlines", with the name US Airways and all variances and leftovers of US Airways identity erased, does this award still legally bind the parties? Just curious. Can it be declared "in-valid" post-merger?
I read the award it is says "US Airways" all over it but no apparent provision for future mergers or takeovers.
"You are now a United employee" etc etc
???
If US Airways changed its name to USair, would the list still be binding?
Of course.
The best way to think of it is that the award is binding on the pilots. Changing agents or corporate transactions will not change that reality. Whoever represents the pilots, in whichever corporation those pilots are employed, will be obliged utilize that list, even when constructing a new integrated list with another pilot group.