~~~^~~~ said:
How do you figure that? Flying horses is the only person on this thread that uses objective logic to support his position. A $10 an hour operating cost difference does not matter one iota in the allocation of jets. Comair is getting the airplanes that are coming to them.
In my view the Comair pilots' "yes" vote is a huge win for ALPA and I can state objective reasons why:
- It validates apartied scope
- It ratifies ALPA's current ( separate & unequal ) representational structure
- It splits the two problem child pilot groups that were getting big enough together to get noticed
- It reinforces to ALPA that they can negotiate without providing "regional" MEC's with economic analysis and the pilots will still vote for it
- It lets ALPA off the hook for their actions, because the Comair pilots voted for it
- It destroys the moral credibility of the Comair pilots and once you lose the moral high ground then all that is left is self interest. Self interest does not build coalitions that achieve reform.
Fins, I agree with you on these points. I personally hope the vote is no from an ASA point of view. However I will understand if the CMR pilots throw in the towel. I guess I see both sides of this issue. It is a lot easier to cast a "no" vote if you are an ASA pilot than if you are a CMR pilot.
Would someone please explain why anyone should support this agreement, other than the "I want mine, for me" crowd.
No one should support it except the "I want mine, for me" crowd. However if you don't reward people for taking one for the team, they will turn into that crowd.
Your examples at US Air are pathetic. They lost because they did not have the sort of leadership and organization that the RJDC put together. Now you seem to be amongst the many RJDC supporters that discredit the protection that our unity has brought us.
What happened to all the true believers? Are we just giving up? Is it every man for himself?
At some point, true believers become "realists". The ALG and PDT pilots had the best contracts in the regional industry. They have been shrunk while Mesa, Trans States, and CHQ have grown. The same is happening on the United property with the former ACA and with Air Wisc. currently. Over at NWA, Mesaba has stagnated while Pinnacle has grown. On every property, the highest cost regionals have stagnated at best and vanished at worst.
The CMR pilots struck for 89 days. Management started moving airplanes to ASA and SKYW.
During the last RFP, CMR said no - they didn't get any airplanes.
Do you see a trend here. Doing the "right" thing only gets you some accolades on the flightinfo board.
The RJDC has protected the ASA and CMR pilots from "jets4jobs" and further scope limitations. It has not protected us from the whipsaw. This is the whipsaw plain and simple. It works folks.
In the current form, ALPA has no solidarity.