You’re wrong my friend. I took all of that into consideration. I thought it would be better for you to have a job with a base rate of $34 than to have no job at all.
My base rate would be $31.50 after almost three years with CMR. Again, I'm not sure you grasp the fact that we lost a year of longevity and must look one year lower on the scale. I am currently making $37.18, and would be making $41 with no concessions. Is it better for me to have this job after an $11,000/yr pay cut, which will not pay my bills, or to take a chance at keeping my wage while risking the job? You know what I decided, so please don't act altruistic, as if you did it for me and others in my seat.
I thought it would be better for our mechanics, our CSR, our rampies, our dispatchers and our flight attendants to all have some job, than to be unemployed.
I did too, but I figured most of them would still have a job, whether it be servicing our aircraft or others. The flight attendants now have the full heat turned up on them because we were unable to hold the line. Looks to me like they are willing to hold the line at the risk of losing their jobs.
I thought that if the company survived and could escape the clutches of Delta we might have the chance to recover and even to grow, in which case, if we did grow you could upgrade sooner and recover more than you’ve lost. I can’t upgrade so I won’t have the chance to recover anything, but you will.
That would be nice but I would be so buried in debt by then that I would never recover. The difference between CA and FO wage reductions, as you know, is that you may have to change your lifestyle or sell some toys, while I will have to take food off the table or file BK.
It also occurred to me that you are very young. If you have to it is possible for you to start over and still come out ahead. For a large number of our senior pilots that just isn’t possible, whether they want to or not. Did YOU think about that? Forgive me, but it doesn’t sound like you did. Everything you’ve said sounds like it’s all about YOU. I realize that you are your #1 and you make that pretty clear. You should not be too surprised if others think the same way.
I agree wholeheartedly. I do plan on starting over, if all goes well.
I also realize, and have stated many times publicly, the position the more senior guys are in. I feel much more badly for them being put in this predicament than I do for myself. I don't blame anyone for the way they voted or for thinking of themselves first. You are the one who launched that attack.
What I said was that I am embarrassed to work for a company that pays me not only less than the average RJ pilot, but less than all RJ pilots except Mesa. I'm surprised that you don't share that feeling to some degree. There has to be some shame in putting on the uniform of the lowest paid carrier in the business.
I came to CMR because I respected and admired the way you all had fought to raise the bar. I wanted the guaranteed good pay and QOL over the quick upgrade time at other companies. I also wanted to be a part of a group that had each other's back and showed unity when times got tough. Well, it hasn't worked out that way. Had I gone to CHQ, or even Mesa, I would be making more money, have better QOL, and have at least equivalent unity, as there is none here.
I thought about it but I did not consider it and I do not think it should be considered. The ’05 LOA and this agreement are very different. The LOA was a risk that the pilots chose to take for the prospect of new growth. The benefits of that growth would have gone almost exclusively to FO’s in the form of upgrades. When you are already a senior CA you don’t benefit any from the company buying more airplanes just like the one you already fly. The LOA passed. Do you think that was because all the captains voted against it and all the FO’s voted for it? If that was so then how come it wasn’t voted down? After all it didn’t benefit the captains by a whole lot. Sure some would move from the little RJ to the bigger RJ and make a few more bucks, but the real benefit was upgrades for First Officers. Did you vote NO on that one too? I bet you didn’t.
One last time, surplus, the '05 LOA lost us a year of longevity which remains lost when we sign the new LOA. I do not want to argue about the '05 LOA, but want you to understand that when looking at the new pay scales, you must compare your 12th year CA wages against Mesa's 13th year. This makes you, if you fly the 50, the second lowest paid RJ captain in the industry.
I do think most senior captains voted against the 05 LOA, as would I. Those who voted yes bought Fred's line about viability of the company. They didn't vote for it to help out the FO's. Growth does help junior captains and all FO's, thus the 60-40 vote.
Did you expect Delta to go Chapter 11 when that was on the table? Was your policy them “full pay to the last day” as you say it should be now now? I wonder.
That is not my policy at all. I knew pay cuts were coming. I knew they would be steep. I was willing to accept them if they were reasonable. In my opinion, they were not. Delta did not bargain in good faith, nor did they offer us anything reasonable, fair, or average.
Every other DCI carrier has guaranteed growth coming, for one reason or another. Growth to most of the pilot group means quality of life, more money, and job security. Growth is also why they have thus far been willing to work for a lower wage than us. We are not growing and there is no provision in the LOA for growth, thus the wage I can accept in the right seat must be higher than average.
This LOA gives me Mesa plus pennies. Unacceptable. Career earnings for a Mesa pilot are now way beyond those of a Comair pilot. I agree with you that we have nothing to prove, no bar to hold up, but that's not what this was about in my mind. It's about my pride and what I can survive on.
You are right about experience meaning little in this business when it comes to pay. However, a pilot with a certain level of experience can command a certain wage in the open market. For me, with no PIC turbine, that wage is around $35-40K. That is what I will be paid to fly airplanes, my bottom line. If no one wants to pay it, I will leave the industry.
In that one sentence is the real difference between you and I. You think this was voluntary. I think it was blackmail under the guise of bankruptcy. There was nothing voluntary about it. And no, I don’t blame Fred for this, I blame Delta Air Lines.
I don't think bankruptcy played much of a role at all in this. It may have speeded things up, but the end result is the same. Delta can shift our flying anywhere, anytime. That is their leverage and they would've used it, BK or not. Blackmail, no doubt about it. The thing with blackmail is, once you give in, they still have that leverage, and they keep coming back. It has to stop somewhere.
We had the choice to walk or eat this LOA. I would rather walk out of here without a knife in my back. I also understand quite well that others may not have that choice and I place no blame on them at all.
I don't blame Fred or Delta. What they are doing is hard, cold business. I hate them for the inhumanity of it and wish things were different, but they're not. I place the blame squarely on the shoulders of ALPA. We have no leverage because ALPA has not made any move to unify regional pilots.
Young man I voted for this for one reason only. Delta Air Lines has a loaded gun and it is pointed at our collective heads. If they have to they WILL pull the trigger. Even though we voted YES, they will still pull the trigger if that is in the best interest of Delta Air Lines. That’s the way the cookie crumbles. It’s not pretty, it’s reality.
Agreed.
I respect and understand where you are coming from. I hope you can do the same. It was a tough choice for all, many factors to consider. In the end, I guess it did come down to me and my need to feed and clothe myself. I would rather do that at Comair but, if they won't pay me enough, I will find someone who will. I took a chance at saving the wage that would allow me to stay. For you, the option of leaving may not have been there, so it came down to keeping your job at any cost.